[LON-CAPA-cvs] cvs: loncom /html/adm/help/tex Numerical_Response_Parts_A.tex

vandui11 lon-capa-cvs@mail.lon-capa.org
Tue, 15 Feb 2005 14:50:02 -0000


vandui11		Tue Feb 15 09:50:02 2005 EDT

  Modified files:              
    /loncom/html/adm/help/tex	Numerical_Response_Parts_A.tex 
  Log:
  structure of major parts made consistent
  
  
Index: loncom/html/adm/help/tex/Numerical_Response_Parts_A.tex
diff -u loncom/html/adm/help/tex/Numerical_Response_Parts_A.tex:1.2 loncom/html/adm/help/tex/Numerical_Response_Parts_A.tex:1.3
--- loncom/html/adm/help/tex/Numerical_Response_Parts_A.tex:1.2	Thu Jul 18 11:52:27 2002
+++ loncom/html/adm/help/tex/Numerical_Response_Parts_A.tex	Tue Feb 15 09:50:02 2005
@@ -10,15 +10,15 @@
 A Numerical Response problem has seven major parts by default:
 
 \begin{enumerate}
-\item The \textbf{Script}. The script is the heart of advanced Numerical Response
+\item The \textbf{Script} is the heart of advanced Numerical Response
 problems. It can be used to decide some of the parameters of the problem,
 compute the answer to the problem, and do just about anything else you can
 imagine. The Script language is \textbf{Perl}. You do not need to know Perl
-to use the \textbf{Script} block, as we will be stepping through some advanced
+to use the \textbf{Script} block because  we will be stepping through some advanced
 examples in this chapter, but knowing Perl can help.
 \item Like other problem types, the \textbf{Text Block} is used to display the
 problem the student will see. In addition, you can place variables in the
 \textbf{Text Block} based on computations done in the \textbf{Script}.
 \item The \textbf{Answer} is the answer the system is looking for. This can also
 use parameters from the \textbf{Script} block, allowing the answer to be
-computed dynamically.
\ No newline at end of file
+computed dynamically.