getmcq / input /input1.txt
Aakash Goel
cleaning
d0941bb
Talk to your stakeholders before building any data product. Understand the business’ needs at the current stage: If it’s a startup, I bet your stakeholder won’t care too much about the format and color of the data visualizations you build but wants to instead focus on the accuracy of the data behind the visualizations and insights from them. Similarly, truly understand the audience and use case; for example, you would spend more time on a polished and simple user interface if the data product is intended to be used regularly by non-technical audiences.
Bunny and Crow live in the forest. Bunny has soft white fur and long floppy ears. She lives in a nice little house under a rock. She likes to hop through the bushes. She likes to visit her animal friends. But she always wondered what the world outside the forest was like. Crow has shiny black feathers. His house is a nice nest at the top of a tree. He likes to fly high above the forest. He likes to fly over rivers and towns outside the forest. One day, Bunny saw Crow sitting in a tree. “Hello Crow!” she called. “Can you tell me what the world is like outside the forest?” So Crow told Bunny all about the rivers and towns outside the forest. Bunny and Crow became good friends.
Billy and Ron are brothers. Billy is 5 years old. Ron is 7 years old. One day their mom took them to the zoo. Billy wore his red cap, and Ron wore his blue cap. They had fun watching all the animals. Ron liked the monkeys the best. He wanted to stay and watch them some more, but Billy wanted to go see the elephants. Elephants were Billy’s favorite. Their mom said it was time to go see the elephants, and Ron was sad. But their mom said they could come back and see the monkeys again before they left the zoo. Billy and Ron had a great day at the zoo.
Luca’s grandpa lives on a farm. His grandpa has a big garden, and many animals. When Luca was little, he was afraid of the chickens. When he helped his grandpa feed the chickens, the chickens chased him, crying, “Cluck, cluck, cluck!” But his grandpa showed him how to shoo the chickens away with his hand, saying, “Shoo chicks, shoo chicks!” Luca still doesn’t like the chickens much, but he isn’t afraid of them now. He feels very grown up.
Alice’s aunt Lucy gave her a book that shows how to draw cartoons. It shows, step-by-step, how to draw a cartoon person, a cartoon cat, a cartoon mouse, and other animals. Most cartoon drawings start with circles. First you sketch lightly, until you like the way the drawing looks. Then you draw the lines in darker. Now Alice likes drawing cartoons even more than she likes coloring.
Molly took her new bike out to the sidewalk. Her dad was going to teach her to ride it. He said it was easy, but she wasn’t so sure. He said not to worry, but she wasn’t so sure. She got on the bike, and her dad ran beside her, holding on to keep her steady. The bike wiggled a little, but Molly rode to the end of the block. She put on the brakes and looked around. Her dad was all the up the sidewalk—she had been riding all by herself! After that, Molly never worried about riding a bike. She knew that she could do it.