What is the difference between output and input?If you sing into a microphone you can hear the microphone's output.Sound coming out of the power amp to the speakers.That is the input of the loudspeaker.Do you see the difference?Your voice is the microphone's input. Its output is electrical impulses that are input to the amplifier. The amplified impulses are the output of the amplifier and input to the speaker. Sound waves are output of the speaker and input to your ears.
It is the process which converts the input to output.
3n + 4
If every input has an output. If two outputs are the same, they must have the same input.
Mechanical Advantage which is the output force divided by the input force.
A modem can be used for sending (output) and/or receiving (input).
Neither, it is not classified under input or output. It has its own identity
levers are classified by the locations of the input and output forces relatively to the fulcrum
Generally input would go first, since. a computer won't do anything until it receives instructions.
A CPU covert input to output bye binary data as input and processes data according to those instructions.
Well, it's neither, and both. It's classified as an input/output device. Or I/O.
It can be classified as both. It receives output from one device. It boosts the power and sends it as input to another device.
Input. You're sending instructions or commands to the computer. Output is when the computer gives information to you, such as a monitor, printer, or speakers.
The input would be you pressing the keys and the output would be the letters on the screen?
Neither, it is classified as a Storage Device.
It's all 3.
The only thing that limits the number of inputs and output instructions is the size/amount of the PLC memory.