Wednesday 5 April 2017

Java Solved Paper

NIELIT A Level Solve Paper

January-2013

A10.1-R4: INTRODUCTION TO OBJECT-ORIENTED PROGRAMMING THROUGH JAVA


PART ONE
(Answer all the questions)

1. Each question below gives a multiple choice of answers. Choose the most appropriate one and enter in the “tear-off” answer sheet attached to the question paper, following instructions therein. (1x10)
1.1 The basic design strategies embedded in object-oriented programming is/are
A) Abstraction
B) Composition
C) Generalization
D) All of the above

Tuesday 4 April 2017

NIELIT A Level Java Solve Paper Jan-14

 January, 2014
A10.1-R4: INTRODUCTION TO OBJECT ORIENTED PROGRAMMING THROUGH JAVA


PART ONE

(Answer all the questions)


1. Each question below gives a multiple choice of answers. Choose the most appropriate one and enter in the “OMR” answer sheet supplied with the question paper, following instructions therein. (1x10)


1.1 Methods used to obtain information about an object are known as

A) accessor methods

B) setter methods

C) mutator methods

D) none of the above

NIELIT A Level Java Solve Paper July-12

 July, 2012
A10.1-R4: INTRODUCTION TO OBJECT ORIENTED PROGRAMMING THROUGH JAVA


PART ONE
(Answer all the questions)

1. Each question below gives a multiple choice of answers. Choose the most appropriate one and enter in the “tear-off” answer sheet attached to the question paper, following instructions therein. (1x10)

1.1 In UML diagram of a class
A) state of object cannot be represented
B) state is irrelevant
C) state is represented as an attribute
D) state is represented as a result of an operation

Monday 3 April 2017

What is MAN

NIELIT O Level Solved Paper
Internet and Web Technology


Q: Define MAN. Write down three important features that discriminate MAN from WAN.

A metropolitan area network (MAN) is a network that connect users with computer resources in a geographic area or region larger than that covered by even a large local area network (LAN) but smaller than the area covered by a wide area network (WAN). The term is applied to the interconnection of networks in a city into a single larger network (which may then also offer efficient connection to a wide area network). It is also used to mean the interconnection of several local area networks by bridging them with backbone lines. The latter usage is also sometimes referred to as a campus network.