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MBA IT, Mater in Science and Technology
Devry
Jul-1996 - Jul-2000
Professor
Devry University
Mar-2010 - Oct-2016
a. Use nested for loops to find all the three-digit Armstrong numbers. Armstrong numbers are three digit numbers such that the sum of the digits cubed is equal to the number itself.
For example, 153 is an Armstrong number because 1³ + 5³ + 3³ = 153
However, 294 is not, because 2³ + 9³ + 4³ = 801 (not 294)
b. Use nested for loops to find four positive integers whose sum is 45, and such that the first plus 2, the second minus 2, the third multiplied by 2, and the fourth divided by 2 are all equal.
Please note that these four numbers are integers, and not necessarily just digits. In this problem, we are no longer finding a single four-digit number; we are finding four separate numbers. However, since we are trying to generate all possible combinations, the procedure should be the same.
For those of you having trouble with the English on this one (I've noticed that students really don't like word problems), here's what that means.
The following mathematical statments are also true about these numbers:
A + 2 = B - 2 = C × 2 = D ÷ 2
and
A + B + C + D = 45Â
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