Convoluted answers ??? Joseph's answer addresses the implicit goal of the exercises 
provided -
divide and conquer. Or to quote (IMSM)  Henry Ford - no job is impossible if you break 
it down
into small enough steps. 

And to answer Tim's second Q - a programmer is a translator between the human world 
view and the
computer's world view of and/or gates; this, of course, involves abstraction and 
decomposition. 

P.S. Tim - The greater effort you make to solve these problems on your own, the 
greater will be
you reward of understanding.



--- H Shankaranarayanan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> There it starts again. If people can answer straight on this list it would be
> really great. Why such convoluted answers?
> 
> And am sure Alan this is of no interest to anyone asking questions be it on any
> topic. Its just going to make them think twice before asking a question down the
> line.
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Tim Nicholson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Wednesday, September 25, 2002 4:18 AM
> To: JDJList
> Subject: [jdjlist] what is it like to be a programmer "in the real
> world" ?
> 
> 
> And to Joseph or anyone else who would like to answer:-
> 
> Can you possibly tell me what it is like to be a programmer (in I assume the
> Java language) in the real world ? What I mean really by that is, what sort
> of code do you write in your job ? I assume you are working as a computer
> programmer ?
> 
> So what sort of code do you produce and work with in your job ? And is this
> difficult code ? Would I find it difficult to understand and work with ?
> 
> 
> 
> 
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Joseph B. Ottinger" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: "JDJList" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Wednesday, September 25, 2002 8:12 PM
> Subject: [jdjlist] Re: two exercises I am trying to solve at the moment....
> 
> 
> > RE: [jdjlist] Re: J2MEWell, Tim, the first step is to read the suggestions
> > made by your coursework. Start small; write functions that do the simple
> > stuff first. Break the problems down (although most of the work has been
> > done for you already.) Man, these questions have gotten easier since *I*
> was
> > in grade 9.
> >
> > ----- Original Message -----
> > From: Tim Nicholson
> > To: JDJList
> > Sent: Wednesday, September 25, 2002 4:09 AM
> > Subject: [jdjlist] two exercises I am trying to solve at the moment....
> >
> >
> > Hi everyone again,
> >
> > this is in addition to the previous email that I sent but this is on a
> > rather different topic.
> >
> > I am trying to work through some problems/exercises and I was wondering if
> > anyone might be able to suggest how I might be able to solve these
> problems
> > ?
> >
> > Like I said before, this email is on a different topic to the email that I
> > sent before.
> >
> > The 1st problem I was wondering if anyone could help me on is as follows
> :-
> >
> > ========================================================================
> >
> > Design and implement a program that allows the user to input a number in
> any
> > base (2..16) as a string of digits (0..9, A..F) and the base that the
> number
> > is in and displays the value in decimal of the input number.
> > Your program must have two function methods that respectively return:
> > the value of one digit character; and
> > the value of a whole string of digits in a given base.
> > Hint: The first of those functions makes it easier to write the second.
> > Your program may have a BreezySwing or text-only interface
> >
> > ========================================================================
> > ========================================================================
> > And the second one is like this :-
> > =======================================================================
> > Write a program that allows the user to input any int value and outputs
> that
> > number in words.
> > Examples:
> > inputoutput
> > 0zero
> > 3three
> > 13thirteen
> > 23twenty-three
> > 223223two hundred and twenty-three thousand, two hundred and twenty-three
> > 223223223two hundred and twenty-three million, two hundred and
> twenty-three
> > thousand, two hundred and twenty-three
> > >2147483647two billion, one hundred and forty-seven million, four hundred
> > and eighty-three thousand, six hundred and forty-seven
> > -1minus one
> >
> > Your program must have three function methods that respectively return:
> > a value between 1 and 9 in words;
> > a value between 1 and 999 in words; and
> > any int value in words.
> > Hint: The first of those functions makes it easier to write the second and
> > writing the second will help write the third.
> > Good solutions may have even more functions.
> > =========================================================================
> > ========================================================================
> > I really don't have a clue how to solve these so any help as to what sort
> of
> > algorithm and java code implementation that I could use, would be very
> much
> > appreciated.
> >
> >
> > To change your JDJList options, please visit:
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> >
> > To change your JDJList options, please visit:
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> >
> 
> 
> 
> To change your JDJList options, please visit:
> http://www.sys-con.com/java/list.cfm
> 
> 
> To change your JDJList options, please visit: http://www.sys-con.com/java/list.cfm


=====

Mark Zawadzki Performance Engineer/DBA/Programmer extraordinaire� [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 "Democracies die behind closed doors," - Judge Damon Keith


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