Computer Science 161.01
Fall 2013

Meetings:

MWF 9:30AM-10:20AM Bagby 111

Instructor:

Professor Tom Valente
Bagby 123 x6210
email: tvalente

Office Hours:

MTWR 2:30PM-4:00PM, other times by appointment and by announcement

Textbook:

Foundations Of Computer Science, 2nd Edition by Forouzan and Mosharraf

Course Description:

This is a broad based introduction to computer science, using a hands-on approach to learning. This course has no prerequisites except a willingness to pursue the course objectives.

Computer Science is the study of the kinds of problems that computers can solve and how they actually, in the end, solve them. At the heart of computer science is the notion of algorithm . An algorithm is a careful and thorough step-by-step description (or "recipe") of how to solve a problem. The process of programming a computer begins with the programmer expressing (perhaps informally) an algorithm that will do so. The process continues with the programmer then encoding the algorithm in a programming language such as Java or C++. Remarkably, a computer does not understand nor can it execute instructions written in such languages. Instead, the algorithm is executed by a computer's hardware, the circuits of which understand only 0 and 1 (by detecting either high or low voltage).

The first part of the course will focus on how the computer, at its lowest levels, actually processes information. We'll learn how all information, regardless of its type (textual, numerical, audio, video) is represented in binary. We'll then learn how a computer's circuits can perform fundamental tasks such as adding two numbers or comparing two numbers.

After we've understood enough about the behavior of the computer at is lowest levels, we'll "zoom out" to think about what a person (i.e. programmer) must do in order to have the computer solve a problem. We'll study algorithms, both how to express them and how to understand whether or not an algorithm can produce answers in a reasonable amount of time. We'll do this by investigating algorithms to solve problems such as sorting a list of numbers or searching a list of names for some desired name.

Of course, an algorithm must expressed as a computer program in order for a computer to execute its instructions. Thus, later in the course, we will look at how computer programming languages have evolved to the ones that are in use today. We'll use a modern high-level programming language to learn about both procedural and object-oriented programming, the latter being particularly important in modern programming.

Finally, we'll investigate one of today's hot issues - that of secure communications. We'll study a couple of modern methods for encoding secret messages (an area known as Cryptography). In doing so, we'll understand once and for all that computers DO have limitations, and that this is not necessarily a bad thing!

Grading:

In-class Tests (3 in class - Sep 27th, Nov 1st, Nov 25th) 30% (12-12-6)
Final Exam (Tuesday Dec 17th at 9:00AM) 25%
Quizzes 10%
Homework 35%
Tests must be taken at the date and time announced, unless you provide a legitimate excuse prior to the time of the test. Quizzes must be taken when given. Homework will be due about once weekly, usually on a Friday. No homework will be accepted after that Friday. Unless told otherwise, you may work in pairs on your homework.

JavaScript Worksheet Downloads

Oct 14   Oct 16   Oct 25   Nov 4-6
Fri Nov 8

Nov 11 Sequential Search
Nov 13 Binary Search
First Pass of Selection Sort
The Completion of Selection Sort!
Nov 22 Practice Problems
Dec 6 Array and Strings Practice

List Processing Algorithms

A real FUN demo of Linear Search
A real FUN demo of Binary Search
Selection Sort   Insertion Sort and Bubble Sort

Notes

Wednesday Aug 28   Week of Sep 2   Week of Sep 9   Week of Sep 16
Test 1 Study Guide

Week of Sep 30   Week of Oct 7
Mon Oct 14   Wed Oct 16   Fri Oct 18   Wed Oct 23
Test 2 Study Guide (Download)
Fri Nov 8

Links

A Scratchpad for doing basic Javascript programming

Our first day attendance experiment as a Javascript program.

Click here for a simulator that allows us to construct circuits that use the logic operations we learned.

Click here to program the VSC-32 in machine language.

Click here to enter a VSC-32 machine language program in hex.

Assembly Language Programming on the VSC-32

A cipher used by Julius Caesar

A Caesar cipher with no word length clues!

A more general substitution cipher

Homework

Homework 1 Due Friday September 6th
Homework 2 Due Monday September 16th
Homework 3 Due Friday September 20th
Homework 4 (to be done in class Mon/Wed Sep 23/25)
Homework 5 Due Wednesday October 9th
Homework 6 Due Monday October 14th
Homework 7 Due Friday October 18th
Homework 8 (DOWNLOAD) Due Wednesday October 30th at 5PM
Homework 9 (DOWNLOAD) Due Friday November 8th at 3PM
Homework 10 (DOWNLOAD) Due Friday November 15th at 5PM
Homework 11 Due Friday November 22nd
Homework 12 (DOWNLOAD) Due Friday December 6th
Homework 13 (optional) Due Tuesday December 17th at 9AM

Solutions to Recent Homework

Homework 8 (DOWNLOAD)
Homework 9 (DOWNLOAD)
Homework 10 (DOWNLOAD)