Computer Science: An OverviewIntroduction to Computer Science Computer Science: An Overview, Ninth Edition J. Glenn Brookshear, "Marquette University" Do you want your students to gain a fundamental understanding of the field of computer science? Would you like them to be excited by the opportunities computing presents for further studies and future careers? "Computer Science: An Overview "delivers a foundational framework of what computer science is all about. Each topic is presented with a historical perspective, its current state, and its future potential, as well as ethical issues for students to consider. This balanced, realistic picture helps students see that their future success depends on a solid overview in the rapidly changing field of computer science. Features:
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Page 229
... result of the secondary search should be reported as the result of the original search . Thus we report that the original search has suc- ceeded . Our process has correctly determined that Bill is a member of the list Alice , Bill ...
... result of the secondary search should be reported as the result of the original search . Thus we report that the original search has suc- ceeded . Our process has correctly determined that Bill is a member of the list Alice , Bill ...
Page 231
... result of that search . ) case 3 : TargetValue > TestEntry ] end if ( Apply the procedure Search to see if TargetValue is in the portion of List following TestEntry , and report the result of that search . ) procedure Search ( List ...
... result of that search . ) case 3 : TargetValue > TestEntry ] end if ( Apply the procedure Search to see if TargetValue is in the portion of List following TestEntry , and report the result of that search . ) procedure Search ( List ...
Page 534
... result in register R. Example : 634E would cause the values in registers 4 and E to be added as floating - point values and the result to be placed in register 3 . OR the bit patterns in registers S and T and place the result in ...
... result in register R. Example : 634E would cause the values in registers 4 and E to be added as floating - point values and the result to be placed in register 3 . OR the bit patterns in registers S and T and place the result in ...
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Data Manipulation | 79 |
Networking and the Internet | 147 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
activities application application software Apply the procedure approach assigned binary search binary search algorithm bit pattern browser byte called Carol Chapter client communication components computer science consider containing data type database described diagram digits disk document domain employee encoded encryption entry example executed Figure goal hexadecimal identify implemented input insertion sort instruction integer Internet linked loop machine language machine's main memory mass storage means memory cell network layer node notation object-oriented operating system output perform pointer problem procedure Search produce program counter programming languages protocol pseudocode Questions & Exercises record recursive representation represented requests result retrieve Section sequence sequential server software engineering solving sort algorithm stack statement steps stored structure Suppose TargetValue task techniques TestEntry tion transferred transport layer tree Turing Turing machine two's complement unit variable