The answer is an Antivirus.
An Antivirus is designed to prevent, detect, and remove, delete, or quarantine malicious software or viruses like Trojans, worms, adware, and many more. Computer users are required to have an installed and updated version of an Antivirus. An Antivirus runs in the background. It scans computers, mobile, devices, or servers and restrict the spread of malware.
Explanation:
a "repeat until" loop checks the criteria at the end of the loop.
but the sequence of the instructions inside the loop writes m before it gets increased (multiplied by 2).
so,
b) 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256
is correct, because at the end m = 256, it gets displayed, then m gets multiplied by 2 (now it is 512). and NOW the loop checks the end criteria (m > 500) and ends the loop.
so, the number 512 never gets displayed. and we are not getting to any larger number anyway.
This is probably false. Take a language like C++, and even though some open source compilers will work for both Windows AND Linux, some functions or libraries may be available on Windows but not Linux and vice versa. Theoretically, if you're using the standard library and the compiler supports it, then yes, but in practice, the answer is usually no.
b)Output
C)Input
ICT Question asap pls help
Answer:
I think it's input, not sure tho
B) Piet Mondrian
C) Theo Ballmer
The answer is Paul Rand.
Paul Rand was best known for his corporate logo designs, such as the logos for IBM, Morningstar, ABC, NeXT, Enron, and UPS. He embraced and practiced the Swiss Style of graphic design to come up with these logos. Paul met an already existing IBM logo and made it subtle. He replaced the font Beton with a typeface called City and gave the letters IBM a more solid and balanced appearance.
Answer:
a
Explanation:
b. Shock Wave.
c. Flash.
d. Applet.