Difference between revisions of "AnswerOrderedList1"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(Created page with '<h2>Answer is an Ordered List</h2> 300px|thumb|right|Click to enlarge <p style="background-color:#f9f9f9;border:black solid 1px;padding:3px;"> Th…') |
Paultpearson (talk | contribs) m |
||
Line 158: | Line 158: | ||
[[Category:Top]] |
[[Category:Top]] |
||
− | [[Category: |
+ | [[Category:Sample Problems]] |
+ | [[Category:Subject Area Templates]] |
Revision as of 15:42, 3 January 2012
Answer is an Ordered List
This PG code shows how to write a question in which the answer is an ordered list, such as a sequence of numbers.
- Download file: File:AnswerOrderedList1.txt (change the file extension from txt to pg when you save it)
- File location in NPL:
FortLewis/Authoring/Templates/Sequences/AnswerOrderedList.pg
PG problem file | Explanation |
---|---|
Problem tagging: |
|
DOCUMENT(); loadMacros( "PGstandard.pl", "MathObjects.pl", "AnswerFormatHelp.pl", ); TEXT(beginproblem()); |
Initialization: |
Context("Numeric"); @seq = (); $seq[0] = 1; $seq[1] = 1; foreach my $i (2..6) { $seq[$i] = $seq[$i-1] + $seq[$i-2]; } $answer = join(", ",@seq); $answer = Compute("$answer"); |
Setup:
We create an empty array |
Context()->texStrings; BEGIN_TEXT If \( s_1 = $seq[0] \), \( s_2 = $seq[1] \), and \( s_n = s_{n-1} + s_{n-2} \), find the first seven terms of this sequence, including \( s_1 \) and \( s_2 \). Enter your answer as a comma separated list of numbers. $BR $BR Sequence = \{ ans_rule(40) \} \{ AnswerFormatHelp("numbers") \} END_TEXT Context()->normalStrings; |
Main Text: |
$showPartialCorrectAnswers=1; ANS( $answer->cmp(ordered=>1) ); |
Answer Evaluation:
Since the answer is a MathObject List, which is by default unordered, we must specify that the answer checker use |
Context()->texStrings; BEGIN_SOLUTION ${PAR}SOLUTION:${PAR} Solution explanation goes here. END_SOLUTION Context()->normalStrings; COMMENT('MathObject version.'); ENDDOCUMENT(); |
Solution: |