1 / 27

Comp 110 Introduction to Programming

Comp 110 Introduction to Programming. Liang-Jun Zhang MTWRF 9:45-11:15 am Sitterson Hall 011. Outline. Course Introduction Administrative things. What Is Programming?. Crafting a set of instructions to solve a problem Analogy: cooking recipes Ingredients (potatoes, banana, tofu, milk)

guinivere
Télécharger la présentation

Comp 110 Introduction to Programming

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Comp 110Introduction to Programming Liang-Jun Zhang MTWRF 9:45-11:15 am Sitterson Hall 011

  2. Outline • Course Introduction • Administrative things

  3. What Is Programming? • Crafting a set of instructions to solve a problem • Analogy: cooking recipes • Ingredients (potatoes, banana, tofu, milk) • Procedures (cut, fry, stew, mix) • Results (potato banana ice cream) • Hello world demo • Sorting algorithm demo • http://www.Kayak.com Program Output Input

  4. What Is Programming? • Who “reads” computer programs? • The physical computer • Humans (yourself, your coworkers, your instructor) • Must be clear and well-structured • Programming with pen and paper

  5. About COMP 110 • Learn the basic components of computer programming • can be applied to any programming language (Java, C++, etc.) • Is COMP 110 right for you? • Require basic computer skills • No programming knowledge assumed • Math, algebra

  6. Is COMP 110 Right for You? • Do you have web programming experience with Java, perl, php? • Experience with “classes” in C++? • Some experience with Matlab, Mathematica? • Do you know what is meant by Object, method, member variable, recursion, array, sorting algorithms? If yes to any, you may be ready for COMP401 instead.

  7. About Me • UNC Ph.D. student, will start 4th year • Research interests - Robotics, graphics • http://www.cs.unc.edu/~zlj • zlj@cs.unc.edu • Sitterson 330, 919-962-1737(O)

  8. About You • Introduce yourself to the class - name - year - major - something special about you …

  9. Course Webpage • http://www.cs.unc.edu/~zlj/comp110 • UNC Blackboard System • http://blackboard.unc.edu • Lecture notes • Sample codes • Assignments • Checking grades

  10. Weekly Schedule • Lecture • MTWRF, 9:45-11:15 am, Sitterson Hall 011 • Bring your laptop • Needn’t bring the textbook • Schedule • Office Hours • MTWR 1:00-3:00PM, SN-019 (PC-Lab) • Extra office hours by appointment

  11. Lecture Format • Review previous material • Answer any questions • Present new material • Notebook computers closed please • In-class exercises and programming • use laptop computer • work individually or in groups • Feel free to ask questions anytime

  12. Lecture Notes • Will be posted shortly after lecture • Might be modified

  13. Textbook Required Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design D. Malik The 3rd edition: ISBN 1-4239-0135-5

  14. Software • Java SDK (JDK) • jGRASP • Please install them on your laptop • See the homework 0 • We’ll do a tour tomorrow

  15. Grades

  16. Assignments • Homework assignments from textbook • practice for exams • Programming assignments • May need to demonstrate the executable code by yourself • budget 8-10 hours per program • design, code, debugging • start early! • Deadline • For assignments needed to turn in, the deadlines are due at 10:59pm on the due date • For assignments needed to demonstrate, the deadlines are before the demo time.

  17. Submitting Assignments • All programming assignments will be submitted through Blackboard • Include the demo codes • All assignments must include the honor code pledge • I need signed pledge on paper. • Make it the first thing you put onto any assignment. • http://cs.unc.edu/~zlj/comp110/assignments.html

  18. Collaborating • You can • talk to each other about the lecture topics • talk about assignment requirements • work in groups during recitation on recitation assignments only • You should • do your own assignments -- design and code • You should never • talk to each other about assignment solutions • share code -- it is easy to detect and we will prosecute Pledge Form

  19. Late Policy • Late submission - if less than 24hrs : 25% off - if less than 48hrs : 50% off - not accepted after 48 hrs

  20. Before Coding • Before you open jGRASP and start coding • read the assignment • think about what the assignment is asking for • review lectures and examples on the topic • write (yes, on paper) your plan for completing the assignment (i.e., your algorithm) • talk to/email me if you’re having trouble at this point

  21. Backup Your Work! • Backup your work frequently! • You will lose something at some point • you might have to learn the hard way • Use your AFS(Andrew File System) space • use of AFS space is not required, but is recommended • you can install the AFS Client to your notebook

  22. Quizzes and Exams • Three or fours quizzes • Middle exam (around Jul 9) • Final exam (Jul 24, 8:00-11:00 AM)

  23. Help! • For help on general computer problems, including getting AFS enabled on your laptop or at home • For help on the course related problems, ask the instructor http://help.unc.edu 962-HELP

  24. Sending Email to me • Put COMP 110 in subject line • For example: • COMP 110, I’m lost • COMP 110, This course is too easy

  25. Introduction of jGrasp • Demo

  26. Homework 0 • Sign the paper pledge form • Turn on the Answer the answers in the survey through blackboard • Install JDK & jGRASP • JDK 6 Update 6 • http://java.sun.com/javase/downloads/index.jsp • jGRASP 1.8.6_08 (March 21, 2008) • http://spider.eng.auburn.edu/user-cgi/grasp/grasp.pl?;dl=download_jgrasp.html • Run sample Java program • If you cannot install or run JDK or jGrasp, bring your laptop tomorrow to the class.

  27. Next Class • Overview of computers and programming languages • Turn in pledge form • Turn in the course survey 10:59PM, Jun 19 • Bring your laptop

More Related