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Lab 11: Functions

As usual, create a directory to hold today's files. All programs that you write today should be stored in this directory.

$ cd ~/cs120/labs
$ mkdir lab11 
$ cd lab11 


Practice 1

Write a function called multiply_integers(a, b), which takes two integers as parameters. Your function should return the result of multiplying the integers a and b together.


Practice 2

Write a function called average_four(value1, value2, value3, value4), which takes 4 floating point values as parameters. Your function should return the arithmetic mean (standard average) of the four values.



Coin Counting

There are many people that would call me a lazy person. I don't find that offensive, but I think it's not a valid description. It's not that I'm lazy, I just try to be as efficient as possible. For example, in college a group of friends and I deduced the fewest amount of coins to carry that would produce any arbitrary amount of change. While a computation like that is still a little too complex, figuring out the fewest amount of coins for a fixed amount of change is possible.

Details

Create the function count_coins(cents) in a file called change.py. This function should take as a parameter the number of cents (an integer in the range 0 to 100) and returns the smallest number of coins (using the American monetary system consisting of quarters, dimes, nickles and pennies) necessary to make that amount of change.

Test your function by calling the function multiple times with different parameters. Make sure your code follows the course's code conventions.

Test Cases

Function Parameters Expected Output
0 0
1 1
2 2
5 1
10 1
15 2
16 3
25 1
50 2

Hint

Challenge

Going back to my inspiration for this activity, the perfect amount of change is going to be the maximum number that this function will produce on inputs in the range [0, 100). Once your function is written and tested well, compute the number of coins for all possible change values. Use the max function to find the largest number of coins.