1. Lines 1-13 access to the internet which give people information of all kinds seems a matter of course 2. Lines 14-26 World Wide Web, which began as a little computer program nearly 20
Instructors: Professor Eric Lander, Professor Robert A Weinberg, Dr. Claudette Garde Final Exam Practice Final Exam is on monday dECEMBER 13 9: 00 AM-12 NOON BRING PICTURE工D. Exam Review on Thursday, Dec 9(new material only
6.001 Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs. Copyright o 2004 by Massachusetts Institute of Technology 6.001 Notes: Section 31.1 Slide 3l.ll Trees, graphs and Search In previous lectures we have seen a number of important themes, which relate to designing code for complex syste
Fixed -universe successor problem Goal: maintain a dynamic subset s of size n of the universe 0=10, 1,.,u-1 of size u subject to these operations INSERT(X∈U\\S): Add x to s DELETE(X E S): Remove x from S
The Law of Supply Firms are willing to produce and sell agreater quantity of a good when the priceof the good is higher. This results in a supply curve that slopesupward
In the last lecture two concepts were introduced: Pareto efficiency and general equilibrium. How do they relate? Theorem: The first welfare theorem states that every general equilibrium involves a Pareto efficient llocation