What are 3 examples of inputs?

What are input and output devices?

Some things (like monitors) have an input device, while others have a "null" or no-connection device. The former is more common on desktop systems and laptops, the latter in servers.

The output device might be similar: Some are connected directly to the display (eg a TV) while others are connected through a piece of gear like a router. If I remember right, the input is simply when data enters your computer and gets processed. Outputs are when the result of that processing is sent to someplace else, which could be a physical device like a monitor.

What are 5 examples of input and output?

It depends on the type of interaction that is being described.

What is your input? It might be a string, an int, a datetime, a float, whatever. What are you displaying? A string, an int, a picture, a time?
Let's assume that you're using C# as your example language for the rest of this answer. If the user enters the name "Alice" into the text box, then the output you might get is the name "Alice", or a string that can be assigned to a variable: //Input. Private string username;. //Output. Private void SetUserName(string newName). If I were creating an online bank application, the user will enter their name into the input box and then I would have some code that parses the string, splits it into the first, middle, and last name (or a different breakdown), runs the data through a hashing algorithm, combines the hash and password, and checks to see if the combination was successful. If so, it saves the values into a database of some kind. If not, it generates an error message. Then when the user logs in, the system checks their name to see if they have a password for a particular bank account (ie, their hash is equal to the password), and if it does, it displays the name and password and they log in.

What are the 10 examples of input and output devices?

It's not clear to me what the 10 examples of input and output devices refer to, even if it is possible to identify them in the context of the question "?

". I've been trying to understand the meaning of the term input and output devices. If I may make analogy with a human brain, then a device is analogous to a neuron. And inputs and outputs are analogues to synapses, the connections that allow signals to pass from neuron to neuron.

Inputs are the things that can be seen by a neuron and outputs are the things that a neuron can see. Now, from a human perspective, it is obvious that we have 10 senses which are analogous to neurons (eyes, ears, nose, tongue, skin, taste, nose, genitalia, anal, and tactile) and 10 outputs which are analogous to synapses. But I don't understand why the same terminology is not used for the devices, or if these are also not called input and output devices. Is there a reason? Or could it be that they are not called inputs or outputs, but we are supposed to call them devices? The 10 examples you mention are listed in Figure 1: As already explained, these devices are inputs and outputs for sensory receptors. Sensory receptors are the cells (neurons) in the body that are specialized to receive stimuli from external stimuli and send impulses to the CNS. The CNS is made up of many smaller parts (components) such as the brain stem, the cerebellum, the medulla oblongata, etc.

One of the smaller parts (a component) is the spinal cord. This is a chain of nerves that connect the brain to the rest of the body. At the end of this chain of nerves are sensory receptors. These receptors are the neurons that have specialized to receive signals from the external environment.

From the image above, you can see that some sensors detect touch, some detect temperature, some detect movement, etc. They are connected to the spinal cord. When those sensors detect certain stimuli, they send an impulse to the spinal cord. From the spinal cord, this impulse goes to another component, the brain. For example, an impulse from a touch sensor goes to the brain stem which then sends a message to the cerebellum.

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