Develop a set of classes for a college to use in various student service and personnel applications.
Classes you need to design include the following:
• Person—A Person contains a first name, last name, street address, zip code, and phone number. The
class also includes a method that sets each data field, using a series of dialog boxes and a display
method that displays all of a Person’s information on a single line at the command line on the screen.
• CollegeEmployee—CollegeEmployee descends from Person. A CollegeEmployee also includes a Social
Security number, an annual salary, and a department name, as well as methods that override the Person
methods to accept and display all CollegeEmployee data.
• Faculty—Faculty descends from CollegeEmployee. This class also includes a Boolean field that
indicates whether the Faculty member is tenured, as well as methods that override the
CollegeEmployee methods to accept and display this additional piece of information.
• Student—Student descends from Person. In addition to the fields available in Person, a Student
contains a major field of study and a grade point average as well as methods that override the Person
methods to accept and display these additional facts.
Write an application named CollegeList that declares an array of four “regular” CollegeEmployees, three
Faculty, and seven Students. Prompt the user to specify which type of person’s data will be entered (C,
F, or S), or allow the user to quit (Q). While the user chooses to continue (that is, does not quit), accept
data entry for the appropriate type of Person. If the user attempts to enter data for more than four
CollegeEmployees, three Faculty, or seven Students, display an error message. When the user quits,
display a report on the screen listing each group of Persons under the appropriate heading of “College
Employees,” “Faculty,” or “Students.” If the user has not entered data for one or more types of Persons
during a session, display an appropriate message under the appropriate headin