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I'm writing a single entry accounting package, with check writing, and payroll, that will run on Windows 7. I successfully wrote such a program, in Clarion 4, but runs on Widows XP.
One big problem, is I correct a build, save, but the program forgets my corrections.
Another big problem is that the debugger stop , with can't find a file.
Thank for any help
Leonard
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University of California San Diego Loop Code Block Java Project
Please make sure to submit the assessment with all of your code written below Question #9 in the Final Code Section. The c ...
University of California San Diego Loop Code Block Java Project
Please make sure to submit the assessment with all of your code written below Question #9 in the Final Code Section. The code should be able to be copied and pasted into a program and then run without any changes being made to its format or syntax. //1. Declare a variable named "counter" and assign it an initial value of 10.
//2. Next, declare another new variable named "numbers" and assign it the initial value of an empty array.
//3. Now, declare a for loop and configure it so that it runs a total of ten times. Within the loop's code block, increment the "counter" variable by 73, and push the new value of the "counter" variable into the "numbers" array.
//4. Below the code for your for loop, console log out the "numbers" array to the console.
//5. Next, create a conditional statement which checks if the value of the "counter" variable is greater than 740. If the value is greater than 740, console log the string "Maximum array number exceeded", if the value is not greater than 740, console log the string "Array values within specification".
//6. Now, declare a new variable named "stats". Assign it the value of an empty object literal.
// Now that you have completed creating the arguments which will be passed into the function, it is time to create the function!
//7a. Declare a function named "getStats".
//7b. Declare two parameters for the "getStats" function, "statsObj" (which will receive an object as an argument), and "numbersArr" (which will receive an array as an argument).
// Within the "getStats" function's code block, create the following functionality:
//7c. Use a for loop to find the largest number in the "numberArr" parameter, and then assign that number to a new property on the "statsObj" parameter named "largestNum". Do not use the "Math" object, or any JavaScript function to find the largest number.
//7d. Use a while loop to sum all of the numbers in the "numbersArr" parameter, and store that sum in a variable named "arrTotal". Do not use the "Math" object, or any JavaScript function to sum the numbers in the array.
//7e. Divide the value you stored in "arrTotal" by the total number of elements in "numbersArr" to get the average of all numbers in the "numbersArr" and assign that value into a variable named "arrAverage". Then, assign the value stored in the "arrAverage" variable to a property on the "statsObj" parameter named "averageNum".
//7f. Lastly, return the "statsObj" parameter from the function.
// Outside of the "getStats" function, complete the final steps below:
//8. Call the "getStats" function and pass in the "stats" object and "numbers" array you created in steps 1 - 6 as arguments. Store the object which is returned from the "getStats" function into a variable named "returnedStats".
//9. Finally, concatenate the values stored in the "returnedStats" object into appropriate places the following string "The largest number was ### and the average of all the numbers was ###" and console log the completed string to the console.
WEBD 241 American Military University Web Design Development Project Report
QUESTION:I have a fully functional written code that is error free but there's an issue that I have in regards of adding m ...
WEBD 241 American Military University Web Design Development Project Report
QUESTION:I have a fully functional written code that is error free but there's an issue that I have in regards of adding my ".css" file to my ".html" file. The purpose of my assignment is to change the background color of the page when asked to ""Please enter a hexadecimal color code", which I can, but in my CSS file, I must write a code to set the background color of my page to #FFB3B3. The whole code is written and below I posted the Instructions for the assignment to better assist you in recognizing in what I'm looking for.Specific Instructions for Assignment 7:Perform all of the following steps to complete this assignment:1) Begin by creating a new file in your text editor and include all of the basic HTML code like you did in your previous assignments. Or you can simply make a copy of your HTML file from last week and name the new copy LastFirstAssignment7.html (where "Last" is your last name and "First" is your first name), but be careful not to overwrite your file from last week because you will need it again when you do your Final Project during Week 8. 2) Make sure you change the contents of the <title> tag to "Assignment 7" (just the words – not the quotation marks) and make sure your full name is inside of the <h1> heading, just like in your previous assignments. Also, delete the contents of the <script> tag -- everything between the <!-- and //--> tags, if you created your new file by making a copy of your previous file, because you will be creating a brand new page with different JavaScript code for this assignment. Save your file.3) Upload this file to the HTML validator to check for compliance with the HTML5 standards. Your file should pass validation. If you receive any errors or warnings, then go back through the previous steps of the assignment again until you have corrected all errors and your file passes validation.4) Create another new file in your text editor and save it as Assignment7.css or make a copy of last week's CSS file, being careful not to overwrite last week's file.5) In your CSS file, write code to set the background color of your page to #FFB3B3 and write code to center the h1 element. Save your CSS file.6) Access your webpage again in your browser and confirm that your page has a pale red background and that the heading is centered. Upload your CSS file to the CSS validator to check for compliance with the CSS standards. Your file should pass validation. If you receive any errors or warnings, debug your CSS code until you have corrected all errors and your file passes validation.7) Open your Assignment 7 HTML file for editing. Next, you will reuse and slightly modify code from Lab 11-4. Make sure you change the value of "expires" to a future date. Similar to Lab 11-4, prompt the user to enter a hexidecimal color code. However, instead of prompting them for their name, prompt them to enter their age. Your code should set a cookie with the information the user enters and then retrieve that information from the cookie and set the page background to the color entered by the user.Note: It is recommended that you test this assignment in Internet Explorer and/or Firefox. This code may not work correctly in Chrome.
Northern Virginia Community College Object Oriented Programming Concept Paper
The main Object oriented programming concepts are abstraction, encapsulation, inheritance, and polymorphism. Which do you ...
Northern Virginia Community College Object Oriented Programming Concept Paper
The main Object oriented programming concepts are abstraction, encapsulation, inheritance, and polymorphism. Which do you think is the most important and least important? Defend your opinion.
CIS 300 Week 4 Coding
Chapter 7:Pacific Trails Resort Case StudyIn this chapter’s case study, you will use the Pacific Trails existing website ...
CIS 300 Week 4 Coding
Chapter 7:Pacific Trails Resort Case StudyIn this chapter’s case study, you will use the Pacific Trails existing website (Chapter 6) as a starting point to create a new version of the website that uses a two-column page layout. Figure 7.40 displays a wireframe with the new layout.Figure 7.40 Pacific Trails two-column page layout.You have three tasks in this case study:Create a new folder for the Pacific Trails Resort website.Edit the pacific.css external style sheet.Edit the Home page (index.html), Yurts page (yurts.html), and Activities page (activities.html) to configure the navigation hyperlinks within an unordered list.Task 1: Create a folder called ch7pacific to contain your Pacific Trails Resort website files. Copy the files from the Chapter 6 Case Study ch6pacific folder.Task 2: Configure the CSS. Launch a text editor and open the pacific.css external style sheet file.The body element selector. Change the background color to #4F6D93. Change the ending gradient color to #4F6D93.The wrapper id selector. Change the background color from white (#FFFFFF) to blue (#90C7E3).The nav element selector. This is the area that will float on the page. Remove the background-color declaration—the nav area will pick up the background color of the wrapper id. Remove the text-align declaration. Change the padding to 20 pixels. Configure left float and a width of 160 pixels.The homehero id selector. Configure a 190px left margin.The yurthero id selector. Configure a 190px left margin.The trailhero id selector. Configure a 190px left margin.The main element selector. Modify the style declarations to configure a white (#FFFFFF) background, 190 pixels of left margin, and change the left padding to 30px.Configure the unordered list in the main content area. Replace the ul element selector with a descendant selector (main ul) to specify only ul elements within the main content.The footer element selector. Modify the styles to configure a 190 pixel left margin and white (#FFFFFF) background color.Configure the navigation area. Use descendant selectors to configure the unordered list and anchor elements within the nav element.Style the unordered list. Configure the ul element selector with no list markers, zero margin, zero left padding, and 1.2em font size.Style unvisited navigation hyperlinks. Configure the :link pseudo-class with navy blue text color (#000033).Style visited navigation hyperlinks. Configure the :visited pseudo-class with dark blue text color (#344873).Style interactive hyperlinks. Configure the :hover pseudo-class with white text color (#FFFFFF).Save the pacific.css file. Check your syntax with the CSS validator (http://jigsaw.w3.org/css-validator). Correct and retest if necessary.Task 3: Edit the web pages. Launch a text editor and open the index.html file. Configure the navigation hyperlinks using an unordered list. Remove the special characters. Save the file. Modify the yurts.html and activities.html files in a similar manner.Test your web pages in a browser. Your home page should be similar to the example in Figure 7.41 with a two-column page layout!Figure 7.41 The new Pacific Trails Home page with a two-column layout. Chapter 8: Pacific Trails Resort Case StudyIn this chapter’s case study you will use the existing Pacific Trails (Chapter 7) website as a starting point to create a new version of the website that utilizes media queries to configure display for mobile devices. Figure 8.31 displays wireframes for desktop browser, typical tablet screen, and typical smartphone screen display. When you have finished, the website will look the same in desktop browsers (see Figures 7.41 and 8.32). The mobile displays should be similar to the screen captures in Figure 8.32.Figure 8.31 Pacific Trails wireframes.You have five tasks in this case study:Create a new folder for the Pacific Trails Resort website.Edit the pacific.css external style sheet to include media queries and styles needed for appropriate desktop, tablet, and smartphone display.Edit the Home page (index.html).Edit the Yurts page (yurts.html).Edit the Activities page (activities.html).Figure 8.32 Resize the browser window to approximate the new tablet and smartphone display.Task 1: Create a folder called ch8pacific to contain your Pacific Trails Resort website files. Copy the files from the Chapter 7 Case Study ch7pacific folder into the ch8pacific folder.Task 2: Configure the CSS. Launch a text editor and open the pacific.css external style sheet file.Configure Support of HTML5. Add the following style rule to configure most older browsers to render HTML5 block display elements as expected.header, main, nav, footer, figure, figcaption, aside, section, article { display: block; }Configure Desktop Display. Code the following new styles1. The mobile id. Set display to none. You’ll apply this id when you edit the home page (index.html).2. The desktop id. Set display to inline. You’ll apply this id later when you edit the home page (index.html).Configure Tablet Display. 1. Code a media query below the existing styles to select for typical tablet device viewport size.@media only screen and (max-width: 64em) {}2. Configure the following new styles within the media query:The body element selector. Set margin to 0 and the background color to #FFFFFF;.The wrapper id selector. Set minimum width to 0, width to auto, and box-shadow to none.The main element selector. Set left margin to 0.The nav element selector. Eliminate float (Hint: Use float: none;), set the width to auto, centered text, and configure 0.5em padding.Navigation list items. Use a descendant selector to configure li elements within the navigation area with inline display, 0.25em top and bottom padding, and 0.75em left and right padding.The homehero, yurthero, and trailhero id selectors. Set left margin to 0. Set height to 200 pixels.The footer element selector. Set left margin to 0.Configure Smartphone Display. 1. Code a media query below the existing styles to select for typical smartphone device viewport size.@media only screen and (max-width: 37.5em) {}2. Configure the following new styles within the media query:The header id selector. Set top padding to 1em.The main element selector. Set top and bottom padding to 0.1em, left and right padding to 1em, and font size to 90%.The h1 element selector. Set font size to 1.5em.The nav element selector. Set padding to 0.Navigation list items. Use a descendant selector to configure li elements within the navigation area with block display, 0 margin, and a 2 pixel solid dark (#330000) bottom border.Navigation hyperlinks. Use a descendant selector to configure a elements within the navigation area with block display. This will provide the user a larger area to tap when selecting a hyperlink.The homehero, yurthero, and trailhero id selectors. Do not display the image. Set the background-image property to none and the height to 0.The mobile id selector. Set display to inline.The desktop id selector. Set display to none.Save your pacific.css file. Use the CSS validator (http://jigsaw.w3.org/css-validator) to check your syntax. Correct and retest if necessary.Task 3: Edit the Home Page. Launch a text editor and open the index.html file. Edit the code as follows:Configure a viewport meta tag in the head section that configures the width to the device-width and sets the initial-scale to 1.0.Add statements needed to the head section to apply the HTML5 Shim so that older browsers will successfully display the HTML5 elements.The home page displays a phone number in the contact information area. Wouldn’t it be handy if a person using a smartphone could click on the phone number to call the resort? You can make that happen by using tel: in a hyperlink. Configure a hyperlink assigned to an id named mobile that contains the phone number as shown below:<a id="mobile" href="tel:888-555-5555">888-555-5555</a>But wait a minute, a telephone link could confuse those visiting the site with a desktop browser. Code another phone number directly after the hyperlink. Code a span element assigned to an id named desktop around the phone number as shown here:<span id="desktop">888-555-5555</span>Save the index.html file. Remember that validating your HTML can help you find syntax errors. Validate and correct this page before you continue. Display your page in a browser. While your home page will look unchanged in maximized desktop browsers (see Figure 7.41), as you resize and reduce the browser viewport dimensions, the displays should be similar to the screen captures in Figure 8.32.Task 4: Edit the Yurts Page. When you are finished, the Yurts page will look similar to Figure 8.33.Figure 8.33 Browser approximation of the yurts.html page mobile display.Launch a text editor and open the yurts.html file. Edit the code as follows:Configure a viewport meta tag in the head section that configures the width to the device-width and sets the initial-scale to 1.0.Add statements needed to the head section to apply the HTML5 Shim so that older browsers will successfully display the HTML5 elements.Save the yurts.html file. Remember that validating your HTML can help you find syntax errors. Validate and correct this page before you continue. Display your page in a browser. Resize the browser window to test the media queries. Compare your work with Figure 8.33, which shows screen captures of the yurts page.Task 5: Edit the Activities Page. When you are finished, the Activities page will look similar to Figure 8.34.Figure 8.34 Browser approximation of the activities.html page mobile display.Launch a text editor and open the activities.html file. Edit the code as follows:Configure a viewport meta tag in the head section that configures the width to the device-width and sets the initial-scale to 1.0.Add statements needed to the head section to apply the HTML5 Shim so that older browsers will successfully display the HTML5 elements.Save the activities.html file. Remember that validating your HTML can help you find syntax errors. Validate and correct this page before you continue. Display your page in a browser. Resize the browser window to test the media queries. Compare your work with Figure 8.34, which shows screen captures of the activities page. Pacific Trails Resort is mobile!
Database and query file, zipped
Use SQL Management Studio to create a database called ITCO630_P1.MDF. Be sure to store the database in a location that you ...
Database and query file, zipped
Use SQL Management Studio to create a database called ITCO630_P1.MDF. Be sure to store the database in a location that you will remember. Add the following tables and data to the database. Use the appropriate field types and lengths for the tables.Create the following queries and save them all in a file called ITCO630_P1.SQL. Please note that you can execute individual queries in a query file by highlighting the lines that you want to execute before running the script. Define what database to use with a USE statement.Get the full details of the employee table.Get the full details of the employees who work in store S2.Get the full details of the promotions with a budget greater than $100,000.Get the employee number and promotion number for employees with unknown (NULL) jobs who work on promotion P2.Using a subquery, get the first and last names of the employees who work in the Orange Appeal store.Using a subquery, get full details of all the employees whose stores are located in Orlando.Detach the database and create a zip file called ITCO630_P1.ZIP including the associated log file and the query file. After creating the zip file, reattach the database.Please submit your assignment.Use SQL Management Studio to create a database called ITCO630_P1.MDF. Be sure to store the database in a location that you will remember. Add the following tables and data to the database. Use the appropriate field types and lengths for the tables.Create the following queries and save them all in a file called ITCO630_P1.SQL. Please note that you can execute individual queries in a query file by highlighting the lines that you want to execute before running the script. Define what database to use with a USE statement.Get the full details of the employee table.Get the full details of the employees who work in store S2.Get the full details of the promotions with a budget greater than $100,000.Get the employee number and promotion number for employees with unknown (NULL) jobs who work on promotion P2.Using a subquery, get the first and last names of the employees who work in the Orange Appeal store.Using a subquery, get full details of all the employees whose stores are located in Orlando.Detach the database and create a zip file called ITCO630_P1.ZIP including the associated log file and the query file. After creating the zip file, reattach the database.Please submit your assignment.
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University of California San Diego Loop Code Block Java Project
Please make sure to submit the assessment with all of your code written below Question #9 in the Final Code Section. The c ...
University of California San Diego Loop Code Block Java Project
Please make sure to submit the assessment with all of your code written below Question #9 in the Final Code Section. The code should be able to be copied and pasted into a program and then run without any changes being made to its format or syntax. //1. Declare a variable named "counter" and assign it an initial value of 10.
//2. Next, declare another new variable named "numbers" and assign it the initial value of an empty array.
//3. Now, declare a for loop and configure it so that it runs a total of ten times. Within the loop's code block, increment the "counter" variable by 73, and push the new value of the "counter" variable into the "numbers" array.
//4. Below the code for your for loop, console log out the "numbers" array to the console.
//5. Next, create a conditional statement which checks if the value of the "counter" variable is greater than 740. If the value is greater than 740, console log the string "Maximum array number exceeded", if the value is not greater than 740, console log the string "Array values within specification".
//6. Now, declare a new variable named "stats". Assign it the value of an empty object literal.
// Now that you have completed creating the arguments which will be passed into the function, it is time to create the function!
//7a. Declare a function named "getStats".
//7b. Declare two parameters for the "getStats" function, "statsObj" (which will receive an object as an argument), and "numbersArr" (which will receive an array as an argument).
// Within the "getStats" function's code block, create the following functionality:
//7c. Use a for loop to find the largest number in the "numberArr" parameter, and then assign that number to a new property on the "statsObj" parameter named "largestNum". Do not use the "Math" object, or any JavaScript function to find the largest number.
//7d. Use a while loop to sum all of the numbers in the "numbersArr" parameter, and store that sum in a variable named "arrTotal". Do not use the "Math" object, or any JavaScript function to sum the numbers in the array.
//7e. Divide the value you stored in "arrTotal" by the total number of elements in "numbersArr" to get the average of all numbers in the "numbersArr" and assign that value into a variable named "arrAverage". Then, assign the value stored in the "arrAverage" variable to a property on the "statsObj" parameter named "averageNum".
//7f. Lastly, return the "statsObj" parameter from the function.
// Outside of the "getStats" function, complete the final steps below:
//8. Call the "getStats" function and pass in the "stats" object and "numbers" array you created in steps 1 - 6 as arguments. Store the object which is returned from the "getStats" function into a variable named "returnedStats".
//9. Finally, concatenate the values stored in the "returnedStats" object into appropriate places the following string "The largest number was ### and the average of all the numbers was ###" and console log the completed string to the console.
WEBD 241 American Military University Web Design Development Project Report
QUESTION:I have a fully functional written code that is error free but there's an issue that I have in regards of adding m ...
WEBD 241 American Military University Web Design Development Project Report
QUESTION:I have a fully functional written code that is error free but there's an issue that I have in regards of adding my ".css" file to my ".html" file. The purpose of my assignment is to change the background color of the page when asked to ""Please enter a hexadecimal color code", which I can, but in my CSS file, I must write a code to set the background color of my page to #FFB3B3. The whole code is written and below I posted the Instructions for the assignment to better assist you in recognizing in what I'm looking for.Specific Instructions for Assignment 7:Perform all of the following steps to complete this assignment:1) Begin by creating a new file in your text editor and include all of the basic HTML code like you did in your previous assignments. Or you can simply make a copy of your HTML file from last week and name the new copy LastFirstAssignment7.html (where "Last" is your last name and "First" is your first name), but be careful not to overwrite your file from last week because you will need it again when you do your Final Project during Week 8. 2) Make sure you change the contents of the <title> tag to "Assignment 7" (just the words – not the quotation marks) and make sure your full name is inside of the <h1> heading, just like in your previous assignments. Also, delete the contents of the <script> tag -- everything between the <!-- and //--> tags, if you created your new file by making a copy of your previous file, because you will be creating a brand new page with different JavaScript code for this assignment. Save your file.3) Upload this file to the HTML validator to check for compliance with the HTML5 standards. Your file should pass validation. If you receive any errors or warnings, then go back through the previous steps of the assignment again until you have corrected all errors and your file passes validation.4) Create another new file in your text editor and save it as Assignment7.css or make a copy of last week's CSS file, being careful not to overwrite last week's file.5) In your CSS file, write code to set the background color of your page to #FFB3B3 and write code to center the h1 element. Save your CSS file.6) Access your webpage again in your browser and confirm that your page has a pale red background and that the heading is centered. Upload your CSS file to the CSS validator to check for compliance with the CSS standards. Your file should pass validation. If you receive any errors or warnings, debug your CSS code until you have corrected all errors and your file passes validation.7) Open your Assignment 7 HTML file for editing. Next, you will reuse and slightly modify code from Lab 11-4. Make sure you change the value of "expires" to a future date. Similar to Lab 11-4, prompt the user to enter a hexidecimal color code. However, instead of prompting them for their name, prompt them to enter their age. Your code should set a cookie with the information the user enters and then retrieve that information from the cookie and set the page background to the color entered by the user.Note: It is recommended that you test this assignment in Internet Explorer and/or Firefox. This code may not work correctly in Chrome.
Northern Virginia Community College Object Oriented Programming Concept Paper
The main Object oriented programming concepts are abstraction, encapsulation, inheritance, and polymorphism. Which do you ...
Northern Virginia Community College Object Oriented Programming Concept Paper
The main Object oriented programming concepts are abstraction, encapsulation, inheritance, and polymorphism. Which do you think is the most important and least important? Defend your opinion.
CIS 300 Week 4 Coding
Chapter 7:Pacific Trails Resort Case StudyIn this chapter’s case study, you will use the Pacific Trails existing website ...
CIS 300 Week 4 Coding
Chapter 7:Pacific Trails Resort Case StudyIn this chapter’s case study, you will use the Pacific Trails existing website (Chapter 6) as a starting point to create a new version of the website that uses a two-column page layout. Figure 7.40 displays a wireframe with the new layout.Figure 7.40 Pacific Trails two-column page layout.You have three tasks in this case study:Create a new folder for the Pacific Trails Resort website.Edit the pacific.css external style sheet.Edit the Home page (index.html), Yurts page (yurts.html), and Activities page (activities.html) to configure the navigation hyperlinks within an unordered list.Task 1: Create a folder called ch7pacific to contain your Pacific Trails Resort website files. Copy the files from the Chapter 6 Case Study ch6pacific folder.Task 2: Configure the CSS. Launch a text editor and open the pacific.css external style sheet file.The body element selector. Change the background color to #4F6D93. Change the ending gradient color to #4F6D93.The wrapper id selector. Change the background color from white (#FFFFFF) to blue (#90C7E3).The nav element selector. This is the area that will float on the page. Remove the background-color declaration—the nav area will pick up the background color of the wrapper id. Remove the text-align declaration. Change the padding to 20 pixels. Configure left float and a width of 160 pixels.The homehero id selector. Configure a 190px left margin.The yurthero id selector. Configure a 190px left margin.The trailhero id selector. Configure a 190px left margin.The main element selector. Modify the style declarations to configure a white (#FFFFFF) background, 190 pixels of left margin, and change the left padding to 30px.Configure the unordered list in the main content area. Replace the ul element selector with a descendant selector (main ul) to specify only ul elements within the main content.The footer element selector. Modify the styles to configure a 190 pixel left margin and white (#FFFFFF) background color.Configure the navigation area. Use descendant selectors to configure the unordered list and anchor elements within the nav element.Style the unordered list. Configure the ul element selector with no list markers, zero margin, zero left padding, and 1.2em font size.Style unvisited navigation hyperlinks. Configure the :link pseudo-class with navy blue text color (#000033).Style visited navigation hyperlinks. Configure the :visited pseudo-class with dark blue text color (#344873).Style interactive hyperlinks. Configure the :hover pseudo-class with white text color (#FFFFFF).Save the pacific.css file. Check your syntax with the CSS validator (http://jigsaw.w3.org/css-validator). Correct and retest if necessary.Task 3: Edit the web pages. Launch a text editor and open the index.html file. Configure the navigation hyperlinks using an unordered list. Remove the special characters. Save the file. Modify the yurts.html and activities.html files in a similar manner.Test your web pages in a browser. Your home page should be similar to the example in Figure 7.41 with a two-column page layout!Figure 7.41 The new Pacific Trails Home page with a two-column layout. Chapter 8: Pacific Trails Resort Case StudyIn this chapter’s case study you will use the existing Pacific Trails (Chapter 7) website as a starting point to create a new version of the website that utilizes media queries to configure display for mobile devices. Figure 8.31 displays wireframes for desktop browser, typical tablet screen, and typical smartphone screen display. When you have finished, the website will look the same in desktop browsers (see Figures 7.41 and 8.32). The mobile displays should be similar to the screen captures in Figure 8.32.Figure 8.31 Pacific Trails wireframes.You have five tasks in this case study:Create a new folder for the Pacific Trails Resort website.Edit the pacific.css external style sheet to include media queries and styles needed for appropriate desktop, tablet, and smartphone display.Edit the Home page (index.html).Edit the Yurts page (yurts.html).Edit the Activities page (activities.html).Figure 8.32 Resize the browser window to approximate the new tablet and smartphone display.Task 1: Create a folder called ch8pacific to contain your Pacific Trails Resort website files. Copy the files from the Chapter 7 Case Study ch7pacific folder into the ch8pacific folder.Task 2: Configure the CSS. Launch a text editor and open the pacific.css external style sheet file.Configure Support of HTML5. Add the following style rule to configure most older browsers to render HTML5 block display elements as expected.header, main, nav, footer, figure, figcaption, aside, section, article { display: block; }Configure Desktop Display. Code the following new styles1. The mobile id. Set display to none. You’ll apply this id when you edit the home page (index.html).2. The desktop id. Set display to inline. You’ll apply this id later when you edit the home page (index.html).Configure Tablet Display. 1. Code a media query below the existing styles to select for typical tablet device viewport size.@media only screen and (max-width: 64em) {}2. Configure the following new styles within the media query:The body element selector. Set margin to 0 and the background color to #FFFFFF;.The wrapper id selector. Set minimum width to 0, width to auto, and box-shadow to none.The main element selector. Set left margin to 0.The nav element selector. Eliminate float (Hint: Use float: none;), set the width to auto, centered text, and configure 0.5em padding.Navigation list items. Use a descendant selector to configure li elements within the navigation area with inline display, 0.25em top and bottom padding, and 0.75em left and right padding.The homehero, yurthero, and trailhero id selectors. Set left margin to 0. Set height to 200 pixels.The footer element selector. Set left margin to 0.Configure Smartphone Display. 1. Code a media query below the existing styles to select for typical smartphone device viewport size.@media only screen and (max-width: 37.5em) {}2. Configure the following new styles within the media query:The header id selector. Set top padding to 1em.The main element selector. Set top and bottom padding to 0.1em, left and right padding to 1em, and font size to 90%.The h1 element selector. Set font size to 1.5em.The nav element selector. Set padding to 0.Navigation list items. Use a descendant selector to configure li elements within the navigation area with block display, 0 margin, and a 2 pixel solid dark (#330000) bottom border.Navigation hyperlinks. Use a descendant selector to configure a elements within the navigation area with block display. This will provide the user a larger area to tap when selecting a hyperlink.The homehero, yurthero, and trailhero id selectors. Do not display the image. Set the background-image property to none and the height to 0.The mobile id selector. Set display to inline.The desktop id selector. Set display to none.Save your pacific.css file. Use the CSS validator (http://jigsaw.w3.org/css-validator) to check your syntax. Correct and retest if necessary.Task 3: Edit the Home Page. Launch a text editor and open the index.html file. Edit the code as follows:Configure a viewport meta tag in the head section that configures the width to the device-width and sets the initial-scale to 1.0.Add statements needed to the head section to apply the HTML5 Shim so that older browsers will successfully display the HTML5 elements.The home page displays a phone number in the contact information area. Wouldn’t it be handy if a person using a smartphone could click on the phone number to call the resort? You can make that happen by using tel: in a hyperlink. Configure a hyperlink assigned to an id named mobile that contains the phone number as shown below:<a id="mobile" href="tel:888-555-5555">888-555-5555</a>But wait a minute, a telephone link could confuse those visiting the site with a desktop browser. Code another phone number directly after the hyperlink. Code a span element assigned to an id named desktop around the phone number as shown here:<span id="desktop">888-555-5555</span>Save the index.html file. Remember that validating your HTML can help you find syntax errors. Validate and correct this page before you continue. Display your page in a browser. While your home page will look unchanged in maximized desktop browsers (see Figure 7.41), as you resize and reduce the browser viewport dimensions, the displays should be similar to the screen captures in Figure 8.32.Task 4: Edit the Yurts Page. When you are finished, the Yurts page will look similar to Figure 8.33.Figure 8.33 Browser approximation of the yurts.html page mobile display.Launch a text editor and open the yurts.html file. Edit the code as follows:Configure a viewport meta tag in the head section that configures the width to the device-width and sets the initial-scale to 1.0.Add statements needed to the head section to apply the HTML5 Shim so that older browsers will successfully display the HTML5 elements.Save the yurts.html file. Remember that validating your HTML can help you find syntax errors. Validate and correct this page before you continue. Display your page in a browser. Resize the browser window to test the media queries. Compare your work with Figure 8.33, which shows screen captures of the yurts page.Task 5: Edit the Activities Page. When you are finished, the Activities page will look similar to Figure 8.34.Figure 8.34 Browser approximation of the activities.html page mobile display.Launch a text editor and open the activities.html file. Edit the code as follows:Configure a viewport meta tag in the head section that configures the width to the device-width and sets the initial-scale to 1.0.Add statements needed to the head section to apply the HTML5 Shim so that older browsers will successfully display the HTML5 elements.Save the activities.html file. Remember that validating your HTML can help you find syntax errors. Validate and correct this page before you continue. Display your page in a browser. Resize the browser window to test the media queries. Compare your work with Figure 8.34, which shows screen captures of the activities page. Pacific Trails Resort is mobile!
Database and query file, zipped
Use SQL Management Studio to create a database called ITCO630_P1.MDF. Be sure to store the database in a location that you ...
Database and query file, zipped
Use SQL Management Studio to create a database called ITCO630_P1.MDF. Be sure to store the database in a location that you will remember. Add the following tables and data to the database. Use the appropriate field types and lengths for the tables.Create the following queries and save them all in a file called ITCO630_P1.SQL. Please note that you can execute individual queries in a query file by highlighting the lines that you want to execute before running the script. Define what database to use with a USE statement.Get the full details of the employee table.Get the full details of the employees who work in store S2.Get the full details of the promotions with a budget greater than $100,000.Get the employee number and promotion number for employees with unknown (NULL) jobs who work on promotion P2.Using a subquery, get the first and last names of the employees who work in the Orange Appeal store.Using a subquery, get full details of all the employees whose stores are located in Orlando.Detach the database and create a zip file called ITCO630_P1.ZIP including the associated log file and the query file. After creating the zip file, reattach the database.Please submit your assignment.Use SQL Management Studio to create a database called ITCO630_P1.MDF. Be sure to store the database in a location that you will remember. Add the following tables and data to the database. Use the appropriate field types and lengths for the tables.Create the following queries and save them all in a file called ITCO630_P1.SQL. Please note that you can execute individual queries in a query file by highlighting the lines that you want to execute before running the script. Define what database to use with a USE statement.Get the full details of the employee table.Get the full details of the employees who work in store S2.Get the full details of the promotions with a budget greater than $100,000.Get the employee number and promotion number for employees with unknown (NULL) jobs who work on promotion P2.Using a subquery, get the first and last names of the employees who work in the Orange Appeal store.Using a subquery, get full details of all the employees whose stores are located in Orlando.Detach the database and create a zip file called ITCO630_P1.ZIP including the associated log file and the query file. After creating the zip file, reattach the database.Please submit your assignment.
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