Your algorithm will write two functions called ComputeTotal( ) and ComputeTax( ).
Your algorithm will write two functions called ComputeTotal( ) and ComputeTax( ).
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ComputeTotal( ) will receive the quantity of items purchased, and the unit price of each item. It
will return the total sales (quantity times price).
ComputeTax( ) will receive total sales as a number and the state as a string and return the
amount of tax depending on the state.
NJ
requires 7% tax,
FL
requires 6% tax, and
NY
has 4% tax.
The main program will ask for the name of the customer and read the name in a variable
called
name.
It will also ask for one of the three states listed above. It will ask for the number
of items sold and the unit price of the item.
Main will then call ComputeTotal( ), passing the quantity and unit price. Main will then call
ComputeTax( ), passing the state and the amount of sales and receive back the tax. Finally
Main( ) will print out the total sales, the tax amount, and the total with taxes. For example, see
below.
Enter the name of the customer:
Jack
In which state (NY / NJ / FL) ?
NJ
How many items were purchased?:
3
What was the unit price of the items?:
1.50
The total sales for Jack are $4.50
The total with taxes is $4.82
Make sure you save the return values into an appropriate variable. Use formatted
output to make the program more user friendly.
Be sure to think about the logic and design first (IPO chart, pseudocode, and flowchart), then
code the C# program.