Linear Programming History of linear programming goes back as far as 1940s. Main motivation for the need of linear programming goes back to the war time when they needed ways to solve many complex planning problems. The simplex method which is used to solve linear programming was developed by George B. Dantzig‚ in 1947. Dantzig‚ was one in who did a lot of work on linear programming‚ he was reconzied by several honours. Dantzig’s discovery was through his personal contribution‚ during WWII when Dantzig
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Topic of your facilitation session: ________Learning_________________________ |Title article |Anxiety of learning | |Author(s) |Schein / Coutu | | |
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(2001‚ August 2). The Logical Biases of Computer Programming. 5 6. Backus‚ J. (1978). “Can Programming be Liberated from the von Neumann Style? A Function Style and its Algebra of Program” Common ACM21‚ 8 (August 1978)‚ pp. 613-614. 7. Maclennan‚ Bruce J. (1999). Principals of Programming Languages. 3rd edition: design‚ evaluation and implementation. United States of America. Oxford University Press. 8. Meyers‚ Nathan. (December 1999). Java Programming on Linux. United States of America. Waite group
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Applied Mathematics – I S. R. Rege: D. M. Doke: Latika Bonde (3) Fundamentals of Digital Computing Vishesh Shrivastava (4) Electronics and Communication Technology Vishesh Shrivastava (5) Introduction to C++ Programming Sanjeela Sagar BSc IT SECOND YEAR: SEM III (New Syllabus) (1) Logic and Discrete Mathematics S. R. Rege: Latika Bonde (2) Computer Graphics Ravindra Sangle (3) Advanced SQL Sanjeela Sagar (4) Object Oriented Programming with C++ Sanjeela Sagar (5) Modern Operating Systems Jayalakshmi
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mywbut.com Structured Programming 1 mywbut.com Specific Instructional Objectives At the end of this lesson the student will be able to: • • • • Identify the important features of a structured program. Identify the important advantages of structured programming over unstructured ones. Explain how software design techniques have evolved over the last 50 years. Differentiate between exploratory style and modern style of software development. Important features of a structured
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GENETIC PROGRAMMING: AN INTRODUCTION AND SURVEY OF APPLICATIONS M.J. Willis*‚ H.G Hiden*‚ P. Marenbach+‚ B. McKay* and G.A. Montague* * Symbolic Optimisation Research Group (SORG) Dept. of Chemical and Process Engineering University of Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU‚ UK + Institute of Control Engineering Darmstadt University of Technology Landgraf-Georg-Strasse 4 D-64283 Darmstadt‚ Germany {Mark.Willis‚ H.G.Hiden‚ Ben.McKay‚ Gary.Montague} @ncl.ac.uk http://lorien.ncl.ac.uk/sorg mali@rt.e-technik
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Object-Oriented Programming 1. INTRODUCTION During developing computer science appeared a huge problem - how explain to computer what people need. Since that moment there were a lot of different and interesting suggestions‚ but the most suitable solution was creating a programming languages. One of the most colossal type of programming languages is programming paradigm. "A programming paradigm is an approach to programming a computer based on a mathematical theory or a coherent set of principles
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Sum=i+ odd; Hanly‚ Chapter 8‚ Programming (pp. 396-397)‚ number 1 1. #include<stdio.h> Int main <void> Int list{11}; Int n‚ I‚ sum; Double %_of_total; { Printf(“please enter values\n”) Scanf(“%d”‚&n) For(i=0‚i<=n‚++i) Sum=n/10; %_of_total = sum; Printf(“The%d is the %_of_total %d\n”‚ n‚ %_of_total); Return (0); } Hanly‚ Chapter 8‚ Self-Check Exercises (p. 410)‚ numbers 3-4 3.return (int‚ 1= I <=in_use‚ 0= I =in_use); 4.for(i=0‚ i<=data‚ ++i) Hanly‚ Chapter 8‚ Programming (p. 410)‚ numbers 1‚ 3 1. Int
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LINEAR PROGRAMMING DATE; 5 JUNE‚ 14 UNIVERSITY OF CENTRAL PUNJAB INTRODUCTION TO LINEAR PROGRAMMING Linear programming (LP; also called linear optimization) is a method to achieve the best outcome (such as maximum profit or lowest cost) in a mathematical model whose requirements are represented by linear relationships. Linear programming is a special case of mathematical programming. It is a mathematical
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Assignment Module: Fundamentals of Information Technology Table of Contents Introduction………………………………………....3 Recommendation and Justification……………..…..3 1. Computer……………………………………...4 2. Printer………………………………………....5 3. Scanner………………………………………..6 4. Copier……………………………………….....6 5. Accounting software……………………….….7 6. Payroll software………………………….……7 Security……………………………………….…….7 Cable………………………………………….…….8 Topology……………………………………………8
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