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Thats the thing that i couldnt figure out... is each character worth 1 bit, or 1 byteOriginally posted by honky tonk
Actually, doesn't it make sense not to divide by 8? The size of the fields is in bytes, not bits... right?
i reckon the question was badly wordedOriginally posted by honky tonk
According to the Excel textbook, for Question 14, you don't divide by 8... but I could be wrong.
Well, I just looked at "Actions = Claim Accepted" and saw the tick.Originally posted by mushi
huy, u sure 17 is B? prettty sure its c![]()
According to Heinemann, for Question 14, you do.Originally posted by honky tonk
According to the Excel textbook, for Question 14, you don't divide by 8... but I could be wrong.
I think so tooOriginally posted by james_86
6 A i think.. attribute=field
My answer was B.Originally posted by honky tonk
Well, I just looked up the example in the Excel textbook, and to find out the size (in Kb), you add together the field sizes (so, in our question it would be (20 + 10 + 10 + 6) and then multiply that number by the number of records (in our case, 100), and then finally dividing it by 1024 to put it in kilobytes.
I think the answer was D:
(20 + 10 + 10 + 6) x 100
-------------------------------
1024
Is that not talking about images? There is not bit depth, horizontal or vertical in a data dictionary. This was data type sizes, which I always thought were measured in bytes, not bits, hence the not needing to divide by 8..Originally posted by Huy
According to Heinemann, for Question 14, you do.
File size = horizontal x vertical x bit depth / 8 x 1024 bits
(=1KB)
I think so too
My answer was B.