SVN Turnin Guide |
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Instructors: | Staff: | ||
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Lectures: | Duncan Hall (DH) 1075 | Time: | MWF 10:00-1110:50am |
Lab: | Ryon 102 | Time: | Tuesday 10:50am-12:05pm |
e-mail the entire class: comp211s11 at owlspace-ccm.rice.edu
e-mail just the staff: comp211 at rice.edu
Office Hours:
- Dr. Cartwright: MWF 9:00 AM - 10:00 AM
- Dr. Wong: See home page
- Alina: MWF 11:00 AM -12:00 PM
- Kamal: MF 3:00 PM - 5:00 PM
- Nicholas: TR 7:00 PM - 8:30 PM
e-mail the entire class: comp211s11 at owlspace-ccm.rice.edu
e-mail just the staff: comp211 at rice.edu
Introduction
This course is an introduction to the fundamental principles of programming. The focus is on systematic methods for developing robust solutions to computational problems. Students are expected to have experience writing interesting programs in some credible programming language (e.g., Python, Java, Scheme, C#, C++, Visual Basic .NET, PRL, Scheme, Lisp, etc.) but no specific programming expertise is assumed. The course is targeted at potential Computer Science majors but mathematically sophisticated non-majors are welcome. We expect students to be comfortable with high-school mathematics (primarily algebra, mathematical proofs, and induction) and the mathematical rigor and vocabulary of freshman calculus. Success in the course requires a deep interest in the foundations of computer science and software engineering, self-discipline, and a willingness to work with other people on programming projects. Topics covered include functional programming, algebraic data definitions, design recipes for writing functions, procedural abstraction, reduction rules, program refactoring and optimization, object-oriented programming emphasizing dynamic dispatch, OO design patterns, fundamental data structures and algorithms from an OO perspective, simple Grapical User Interfaces (GUIs), and an exposure to the challenges of concurrent computation.
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DrScheme/DrRacket: Please download and use the DrScheme/DrRacket system available from the Racket download site. To avoid compatibility problems, please make sure you use a Version numbered 5.0.2.
Notes for Java: Object-oriented Design
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- Principles of Object-Oriented Programming by Zung Nguyen and Stephen Wong. An online self-contained introduction to OOP in Java roughly corresponding to the former Comp 212 course. It is reasonably complete, but still under construction, but still under construction.
- Design Patterns Lens - A collection of short descriptions of the design patterns covered in the course.
- Index to online Java Tutorials by Sun Microsystems The Sun tutorials refer to the full Java language not the Elementary and Intermediate language levels supported by DrJava.Nevertheless, they cover many important language details in depth, such as the complete collection of primitive operators on primitive data types.
- Java Basics by Fred Swartz is a clearly written traditional introduction to Java that focuses on Java mechanics rather than OO Design. It can be helpful in learning the mechanics of writing full Java code. Please ignore what he says about program design.
- Java Notes by Fred Swartz is a reasonably comprehensive Java reference that is a good supplement to the official Sun documents.
DrJava: Please download and use the DrJavapedagogic DrJava pedagogic programming environment available from drjava.org. You must install either the Java 5 or Java 6 JDK on your machine for DrJavato work. DrJava to work. (Addendum: DrJava releases starting in 2011 can also run using a Java 7 JDK.) If you machine is running some flavor of Windows or Linux, go to the \[Sun Download Site for the Java SE 6.0 (http://java.sun.com/javase/downloads/index.jsp\]). Make sure that you download the JDK not the JRE. If you have a Mac, a Java JDK is available from Apple. In fact, it is part of the standard Mac OS X software package. DrJavawill DrJava will run on either a the Apple Java 5.0 or Java 6.0 JDK.
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All Comp 211 programming assignments will be run and graded on the CLEAR (Linux) educational computing facility. The Ryon 102 lab is equipped with machines connected to the CLEAR network.
For instructions on how to use CLEAR, see the CLEAR web page.
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| Day | Date(2011) | Topic | Reading | Lectures | Problems | Due(2011) | Lab | Supplements | |||||||||||
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1 | Mon | Jan 10 | Introduction & Scheme Primitives |
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2 | Wed | Jan 12 | Inductive data, conditionals, and the design recipe Function definitions and conditionals | F Jan 21 |
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3 | Fri | Jan 14 | Data -directed design I Definitions & The Design Recipe |
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- | Mon | Jan 17 | School Holiday |
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4 | Wed | Jan 19 | Data-directed design II |
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5 | Fri | Jan 21 | Mutually Referential Data Definitions | Data-directed design: trees |
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6 | Mon | Jan 24 | Local Definitions and Lexical Scope Mutually Referential Data Definitions |
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7 | Wed | Jan 26 | Functional Abstraction and Polymorphism |
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8 | Fri | Jan 28 Functions as Values | Local Definitions and Lexical Scope | Fri Feb 4 |
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9 | Mon | Feb 01 | xxx | xxxx |
| Jan 31 | Functional Abstraction and Polymorphism | Mon Feb 7 |
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10 | Wed | Feb 03 02 | Functions as Values Lambda the Ultimate |
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11 | Fri | Feb 05 04 | Lambda the Ultimate Generative Recursion |
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12 | Mon | Feb 08 07 | Generative Recursion Illustrated |
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13 | Wed | Feb 10 09 | Complexity and Accumulators |
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14 | Fri | Feb 12 11 | Accumulators and Tail Calls |
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15 | Mon | Feb 15 14 | Clever Programming With Functions | Review prior readings |
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16 | Wed | Feb 17 16 | Exam Review Vectors and Iteration | Review prior readings |
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17 | Fri | Feb 19 | Exam Review | Review prior readings | HW 6 (optional) | 18 | On to Java | OO Design Notes Ch 1.1-1.4 |
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18 | Mon | Feb 22 21 | On to Java | OO Design Notes Ch 1.1-1.4 |
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19 | Wed | Feb 24 23 | Java Design Recipe | OO Design Notes Ch 1.1-1.4 |
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20 | Fri | Feb 26 25 | Defining Inductive Data in Java | OO Design Notes Ch 1.5 |
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- | M-F Mar 01- | 05 Feb 28-Mar 4 | Spring Break |
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21 | Mon | Mar 08 07 | Static Class Members and the Singleton Pattern | OO Design Notes Ch 1.6 |
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22 | Wed | Mar 10 09 | Polymorphism and Interfaces | OO Design Notes Ch 1.8 |
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23 | Fri | Mar 12 11 | Handling Exceptions and Errors | OO Design Notes Ch 1.9-1.10, 1.12 |
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24 | Mon | Mar 15 14 | The Strategy and Visitor Patterns | OO Design Notes Ch 1.9, 1.11 |
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25 | Wed | Mar 17 16 | Visitors, Visitors, Vistors ... | OO Design Notes Ch 1.11 |
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26 | Fri | Mar 19 18 | Accepting Reality: Full Java, Arrays, Mutation | OO Design Notes Ch 1.13 |
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27 | Mon | Mar 22 21 | Visibility, Type-Checking, and Generics | OO Design Notes Ch. 1.10, 1.13 | Fri Apr 4 | |||||||||||||||
28 | Wed | Mar 23 |
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- | Thurs-Fri Wed | Mar 24-25 | School Holiday Generics with Discretion |
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29 | Fri Mon | Mar 26 | Mar 28 | Simple Generics in Java Mutation and Bi-Directional Linked Lists | OO Design Notes Ch 1.13.4 (contains advanced material as well) |
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30 | Mon Wed | Mar 29 Graphical User Interfaces 30 | Mutation and Bi-Directional Linked Lists | OO Design Notes Ch 3 1.13 |
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31 | Wed Fri | Mar 31 | Apr 1 | BiLists Continued Anonymous Inner Classes and Task Decomposition | OO Design Notes Ch 2.1 |
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32 | Mon | Apr 5 4 | Mutable Trees | OO Design Notes Ch 2.1 |
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33 | Wed | Apr 7 6 | Mutable Trees Review: Confronting the Reality of Full Java |
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34 | Fri | Apr 9 8 | QuickSort Revisited Mutable Trees |
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35 | Mon | Apr 12 Graphical User Interfaces II 11 | Mutable Trees and OO Data Structure Review | OO Design Notes |
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36 | Wed | Apr 14 13 | OO Sorting Algorithms | CNX Module on Sorting (incl. insertion and selection sort animations) |
| Milestone 1: Mon. Apr 18 |
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37 | Fri | Apr 16 15 | Graphical User Interfaces Fast Searching with Balanced Trees |
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38 | Mon | Apr 19 18 | Fast Searching and Memoization |
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39 | Wed | Apr 21 20 | Fast Sorting Methods Parallel Programming Tradeoffs |
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40 | Fri | Apr 23 22 | Exam II Review |
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Grading, Honor Code Policy, Processes and Procedures
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Reading: For each lecture, there is associated reading. Students are required to complete the reading before the class associated with this reading.h2
Other Resources
- Practical matters:
- Special interest groups:
- CSters
- Computer Science Club
- ... (please send in suggestions!)
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The New Turing Omnibus, A. K. Dewdney | QA76 .D448 1993 |
Algorithmics: The Spirit of Computing, David Harel | QA76.9 .A43 H37 2004 |
Computers Ltd.: What They Really Can't Do, David Harel | QA76.5 .H3575 2000 |
Great Ideas in Computer Science, Alan W. Biermann | QA76 .B495 1997 |
Computer Science: An Overview, J. Glenn Brookshear | QA76 .B743 1997 |
G�delGodel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid, Douglas Hofstadter | QA9.8 .H63 1980 |
Metamagical Themas, Douglas Hofstadter | Q335 .H63 1985 |
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