问题 单项选择题

为了使模块尽可能独立、要求( )。

A.模块的内聚程序要尽量高,且各模块间的耦合程度要尽量强

B.模块的内聚程度要尽量高,且各模块间的耦合程度要尽量弱

C.模块的内聚程度要尽量低,且各模块间的耦合程度要尽量弱

D.模块的内聚程度要尽量低,且各模块间的耦合程度要尽量强

答案

参考答案:B

解析: 系统设计的质量主要反映在模块的独立性上。评价模块独立性的主要标准有两个:一是模块之间的耦合,它表明两个模块之间互相独立的程度;二是模块内部之间的关系是否紧密,称为内聚。一般来说,要求模块之间的耦合尽可能地弱,即模块尽可能独立,而要求模块的内聚程度尽量地高。综上所述,选项B的答案正确。

阅读理解与欣赏

阅读下面的作品,完成小题。

伤怀之美

迟子建

①我八岁的时候,还在中国最北的漠河北极村。漫天大雪几乎封存了我所有的记忆,但那年冬天的渔汛却依然清晰在目。一孔孔冰眼冒出乳白的水汽,雪橇旁的干草上堆着已经打上来的各色鱼类。黄昏时分,云气低沉,大人们将鱼拢在麻袋里,套上雪橇,撤出黑龙江回家了。那是一条漫长的雪道,灰蓝色的。大人们抄着袖口跟在雪橇后面慢腾腾地走着,世界是如此沉静。快到家门口的时候,天忽然落起大片大片的雪花,我眼前的景色一片迷蒙,我所能听到的只是拉着雪橇的狗的热气沼沼的呼吸声。大人们都消失了,村庄也消失了,我感觉只有狗的呼吸声和雪花陪伴着我,我有一种要哭的欲望,那便是初始体会到的伤怀之美了。

年龄的增长是加深人自身庸碌行为的一个可怕过程。从那以后,我更多体会到的是城市混沌的烟云、狭窄而流俗的街道、人与人之间的争吵,那种人、情、景相融为一体的伤怀之美似乎逃之夭夭了。或者说伤怀之美正在某个角落因为蒙难而掩面哭泣。

③一九九一年年底,我终于又在异国他乡重温了伤怀之美。那是在日本北海道,我来到了著名的温泉圣地——登别。问起登别温泉有何独到之处时,日本友人风趣地眨眨眼睛说:人直接面对着十二月的寒风和天空接受沐浴。我吐了下舌头,有些兴奋,又有些害怕。凌晨五时我肩搭一条金黄色的浴巾来到温泉区。站在室内温泉门边就感觉到了寒气,在隆冬的北海道,去露天温泉,实在需要点勇气啊。我犹豫片刻,还是将门推开。这一推我几乎让雪花给吓住了,寒气和雪花汇合在一起朝我袭来。而我不想再回头,尤其有人望着我的时候,我是绝不肯退却的。

④我全身的肌肤都在呼吸真正的风、自由的风。池子周围落满了雪。我下去了,慢慢地让自己成为温泉的一部分。池中只我一人,多安静啊。雪花朝我袭来,而温泉里却暖意融融。池子周围有几棵树,树上有灯,因而落在树周围的雪花是灿烂而华美的。一边是雪,一边是泉水,另一边却结有冰柱(在水旁的岩石上)。我呼吸着新鲜潮湿而浸满寒意的空气,感觉到了空前的空灵与伤怀。

⑤此后,久在城市里已经疲惫不堪的我仍然期待着与你重逢。

⑥去年九月二十日,大病初愈的我终于踏上了一条豪华船。一天黄昏,我独自来到船头的甲板。天边涌动着轰轰烈烈的火烧云,映红了半面江水。这时节有一群水鸟忽然出现在船头不远处,火烧云使它们成为赤色。它们带着水汽朝另一岸飞去,我目随着它们,突然发现它们身上的红色在瞬间消失了,俄罗斯那岸的天空月白风清,水鸟在那里重现了单纯的本色。真是不可思议,一面是灰蓝的天空和半轮淡白的月亮,另一侧却是红霞漫卷。船长在驾驶室发现了我,便用扩音器送出来一忧郁缠绵令人心动的乐曲。我情不自禁地和着乐曲独自舞蹈起来。我旋转着,领略着这红白相间的世界的奇异之美。没有谁来打扰我,陪伴我舞蹈的,除了如临仙界的音乐,便是江水、云霓、月亮和无边无际的风了。伤怀之美在此时突然撞入我的心扉,它使我忘却了庸俗嘈杂的城市和自身的一切疾病。我多想让它长驻心中,然而它栖息片刻就如袅袅轻烟一般消失了。

⑦伤怀之美为何能够打动人心?只因为它浸入了一种宗教情怀。一种神圣的不可侵犯的忧伤之美,是一个帝国的所有黄金和宝石都难以取代的。我相信每一个富有宗教情怀的人都遇见过伤怀之美,而且我也深信那会是人一生中为数不多的几次珍贵片断,能成为人永久回忆的关。         (选自《伤怀之美》,有删改)

小题1:根据文章,简要概括“伤怀之美”的特征。(4分)

小题2:第②节中说“年龄的增长是加深人自身庸碌行为的一个可怕过程”,作者这样说的理由是什么?(4分)

小题3:请简要说明第⑥节中画线句子景物描写的作用。(6分)

小题4:文章结尾说“我也深信那会是人一生中为数不多的几次珍贵片断”,请探究“珍贵”的原因。(6分)

阅读理解

When prehistoric man arrived in new parts of the world, something strong happened to the large animals; they suddenly became extinct. Smaller species survived; the large, slow-growing animals were easy game, and were quickly hunted to extinction. 

Now something similar could be happening in the oceans. That the seas are being over-fished has been known for years and researchers such as Ransom Myers and Boris Worm have shown how fast things are changing. They have looked at half a century of data from fisheries around the world. Their methods do not attempt to estimate the actual biomass (the amount of living biological matter) of fish species in particular parts of the ocean, but rather changes in that biomass over time. According to their latest paper published in Nature, the biomass of large predators (animals that kill and eat other animals) inanes fishery is reduced on average by 80% within 15 years of the start of exploitation. In some long-fished areas, it has halved again since then.

Dr. Worm acknowledges that these figures are conservative (保守的). One reason for this is that fishing technology has improved. Today’s vessels can find their prey using satellites and sonar, which were not available 50 years ago. That means a higher proportion of what is in the sea is being caught, so the real difference between present and past is likely to be worse than the one recorded by changes in catch sizes. In the early days, too, longlines would have been more saturated with fish. Some individuals would therefore not have been caught, since baited hooks would have been available to trap them, leading to an underestimate of fish stocks in the past. Furthermore, in the early days of longline fishing, a lot of fish were lost to sharks after they had been hooked. That is no longer a problem, because there are fewer sharks around noise.

Dr. Myers and Dr. Worm argue that their work gives a correct baseline, which future management efforts must take into account. They believe the date support an idea current among marine biologists, that of the “shifting baseline”. The notion is that people have failed to detect the massive changes which have happened in the ocean because they have been looking back only a relatively short time into the past. That matters because theory suggests that the maximum sustainable yield that can be cropped from a fishery comes when the biomass of a target species is about 50% of its original levels. Most fisheries are well below that, which is a bad way to do business.

小题1:The aim of the extinction of large prehistoric animals is to suggest that _______.

A.large animal were not easy to survive in the changing environment

B.small species survived as large animals disappeared

C.large sea animals may face the same threat today.

D.Slow-growing fish outlive fast-growing ones小题2:We can infer from Dr Myers and Dr. Worm’s paper that _______.

A.the stock of large predators in some old fisheries has reduced by 90%

B.there are only half as many fisheries are there were 15 years ago

C.the catch sizes in new fisheries are only 20% of the original amount

D.the number of larger predators dropped faster in new fisheries than in the old小题3:By saying these figures are conservative (line 1, paragraph 3), Dr worm means that_______.

A.fishing technology has improved rapidly

B.then catch-sizes are actually smaller then recorded

C.the marine biomass has suffered a greater loss

D.the date collected so far are out of date.小题4:Dr Myers and other researchers hold that _______.

A.people should look for a baseline that can’t work for a longer time

B.fisheries should keep the yield below 50% of the biomass

C.the ocean biomass should restore its original level.

D.people should adjust the fishing baseline to changing situation.小题5:The author seems to be mainly concerned with most fisheries’ _______.

A.management efficiency

B.biomass level

C.catch-size limits

D.technological application.