- 4 16 Lab Leap Year A Year In The Modern Gregorian Calendar Consists Of 365 Days In Reality The Earth Takes Longer To 1 (31.76 KiB) Viewed 79 times
4.16 LAB: Leap year A year in the modern Gregorian Calendar consists of 365 days. In reality, the earth takes longer to
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4.16 LAB: Leap year A year in the modern Gregorian Calendar consists of 365 days. In reality, the earth takes longer to
4.16 LAB: Leap year A year in the modern Gregorian Calendar consists of 365 days. In reality, the earth takes longer to rotate around the sun. To account for the difference in time, every 4 years, a leap year takes place. A leap year is when a year has 366 days: An extra day, February 29th. The requirements for a given year to be a leap year are: 1) The year must be divisible by 4 2) If the year is a century year (1700, 1800, etc.), the year must be evenly divisible by 400 Some example leap years are 1600, 1712, and 2016, Write a program that takes in a year and determines whether that year is a leap year. Ex If the input is 1712 the output is: 1712- leap year. Ex. If the input is 1913 the output is 1913 not a leap year