A good answer might be:

5 > 2 || 12 <= 7     T  
5 > 2 && 12 <= 7     F  
3 == 8 || 6 != 6     F  
3 == 8 && 6 != 6     F  

NOT

The NOT operator in Java is this:     !     (exclaimation point.) The NOT operator changes true to false and false to true, as seen in the table. This may seem like a silly thing to do, but often it is useful. Sometimes it is more natural to express a condition in a particular way, but the program logic calls for the reverse of what you have written. Time for the NOT operator.

x!x
truefalse
falsetrue

Say that you are shopping for a new computer. You want more than 2000 MHz and more than 512 Meg of RAM. Here is a program fragment:

if (  ______(speed > 2000 && memory > 512)  )
  System.out.println("Reject this computer");
else
  System.out.println("Acceptable computer");

As it is written, the program is wrong.

QUESTION 21:

Fill in the blank so that the program fragment is correct.