subject

Given a double variable named x that has been declared and given a value, let's use a binary search technique to assign an estimate of its square root to another double variable, root that has also been declared. let's assume that x's value is greater than 1.0 -- that will simplify things a bit. here's the general idea:

since x> 1, we know its square root must be between 1 and x itself. so declare two other variables of type double (a and b say) and initialize them to 1 and x respectively. so we know the square root must be between a and b. our strategy is to change a and b and make them closer and closer to each other but alway make sure that the root we're looking for is between them. (such a condition that must always hold is called an invariant.)

to do this we will have a loop that at each step finds the midpoint of a and b. it then squares this midpoint value and if the square of the midpoint is less than x we know that the root of x must be bigger than this midpoint: so we assign the midpoint to a (making a bigger and shrinking our a and b interval by and we still can be sure that the root is between a and b. of course if the midpoint's square is greater than x we do the opposite: we assign b the value of midpoint.

but when to stop the loop? in this exercise, just stop when the interval between a and b is less than 0.1 and assign root the midpoint of a and b then.

we call this a binary search also because at each stage we cut the interval under consideration in half. efficient as this method is, old isaac newton discovered an algorithm that is even more efficient and that's what the library function sqrt uses.

i have this:

double a=1, b=x;
double mid;

while(a-b> 0.1){
mid=(a+b)/2;
mid=mid*mid;
if (mid a=mid;
else if(mid> x)
b=mid;
else
root=mid;
}

!

ansver
Answers: 1

Another question on Computers and Technology

question
Computers and Technology, 22.06.2019 02:00
Aletter or menu command that starts an action when the user presses the designated letter and the alt key together is called what?
Answers: 1
question
Computers and Technology, 22.06.2019 10:00
According to alisa miller foreign news bureaus
Answers: 3
question
Computers and Technology, 23.06.2019 11:30
Auser is given read permission to a file stored on an ntfs-formatted volume. the file is then copied to a folder on the same ntfs-formatted volume where the user has been given full control permission for that folder. when the user logs on to the computer holding the file and accesses its new location via a drive letter, what is the user's effective permission to the file? a. read b. full control c. no access d. modify e. none of the above
Answers: 1
question
Computers and Technology, 24.06.2019 16:50
7.23 main lab 7 - online shopping cart background this main lab extends the earlier prep lab "online shopping cart part 1". (you should save this as a separate project from the earlier prep lab). you will create an on-line shopping cart like you might use for your on-line purchases. the goal is to become comfortable with setting up classes and using objects. requirements this lab can be done individually or as pair programming. expanded itemtopurchase class (15 points) extend the itemtopurchase class as follows. we will not do unit testing in this lab so we will not be giving you the names of the member functions. create good ones on your own. create a parameterized constructor to assign item name, item description, item price, and item quantity (default values of "none" for name and description, and 0 for price and quantity). additional public member functions set an item description get an item description print the cost of an item - outputs the item name followed by the quantity, price, and subtotal (see example) print the description of an item - outputs the item name and description (see example) additional private data members a string for the description of the item. example output of the function which prints the cost of an item: bottled water 10 @ $1.50 = $15.00 example output of the function which prints the item description:
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
Given a double variable named x that has been declared and given a value, let's use a binary search...
Questions
question
Mathematics, 08.02.2022 15:40