Announcements, etc
- A new ProgrammingLand MOOseum is available online with a
much faster connection. Point your MOO client to:
hostname: dbay.ndsu.edu
port: 7777
Note: passwords have been reset, your current password is your
username (case sensitive), you can change your password with the
@password command.
- Download CLisp with Cs372 examples
(a 3.34 MB Zip file)
- Sample Lisp Files
- Bookings / Details
Thursday, September 18, 2003
2:00 pm - 3:30 pm CS 372 (Reserved) Architecture 102 Clusters
2:00 pm - 3:30 pm CS 372 (Reserved) Ehly 119 (VCIC Classroom) Cluster
Thursday, October 16, 2003
2:00 pm - 3:30 pm CS 372 (Reserved) Architecture 102 Clusters
2:00 pm - 3:30 pm CS 372 (Reserved) Ehly 119 (VCIC Classroom) Cluster
Thursday, November 13, 2003
2:00 pm - 3:30 pm CS 372 (Reserved) Architecture 102 Clusters
2:00 pm - 3:30 pm CS 372 (Reserved) Ehly 119 (VCIC Classroom) Cluster
Thursday, December 11, 2003
2:00 pm - 3:30 pm CS 372 (Reserved) Architecture 102 Clusters
2:00 pm - 3:30 pm CS 372 (Reserved) Ehly 119 (VCIC Classroom) Cluster
- See the first Lisp (member) example
Course Overview
CS372: Comparative Programming Languages, is about the
application, suitability, syntax, and semantics of programming
languages.
General Comments
- This document will change over the course of the semester.
You should check here at least once a week.
- You can expect a substantial amount of outside class effort
for this course, and a substantial amount of reading.
- You can expect an exam around every fourth week
- Use http://blackboard.ndsu.nodak.edu
to enroll in the course, then take the test (you can enroll any time).
- Exams will be available between 2:00 and 3:15 PM, and you will have 75
minutes to complete it.
- 50 questions, multiple choice, open book, open notes,
covering chapters and lecture, but using individual effort
- Two clusters are being reserved to accomodate most of you
(thirty-six seats), the rest
must find a machine somewhere (dorm, cluster, home, etc.)
- The clusters last year were: Ehly 119 (18 computers), Architecture
102 (18 computers). These are being reserved for the semester.
Required Reading:
This semester you will read almost every word of these two documents:
-
Concepts of Programming Languages (6th Edition) by
Robert W. Sebesta.
Published by Addison
Wesley.
- To: "'Brian M. Slator'" <slator@cs.ndsu.edu>
From: "Johnson, Craig" <Craig.Johnson@awl.com>
Date: Mon, 25 Aug 2003 19:24:07 -0400
"[...] The student portion of the textbook
website is suppose to go live this Friday, the 29th."
- Online LambdaMOO Programmer's Manual (LambdaMOO Version
1.8.0p6, March 1997)
There are a number of copies online, both text and html
versions, in a number of pretty similar versions: 1.8.0p6 is the
most recent.
- OPTIONAL:
Online Lecture Notes
Course Structure
The course will have three (3) major components:
- Theoretical study of programming languages. Part of the
course will be held in a virtual Museum of Computer Science
physically located in Valley City State University.
- 5 assignments.
- Assignment #1 - Listserv (50 pts.)
Due:
Midnight, Thursday, August 28.
- Assignment #2 - MOO (50 pts.)
Due:
Midnight, Thursday, September 4.
- Assignment #3 - Lisp (100 pts.)
Due:
Midnight, Thursday, October 2.
- Assignment #4 - Lisp Room/Bot (200 pts.)
Due:
Midnight, Tuesday, December 9.
- Final writing assignment (100 points), OPTIONAL
Due at final exam time, Wed, Dec. 18 at 2:30 PM
No late assignments can be accepted!
write a 3-5 page paper, using good English style and complete
with citations
and references, on ONE of the following topics:
- 1) Compare and Contrast C# with LambdaMOO
- 2) Compare and Contrast Java with LambdaMOO
Note this assignment is optional. It will be averaged in to your
other scores, and could effect your final grade in either
positive or negative manner.
Assignments will be handed in electronically and results will be
returned electronically. Programming assignments are designed to
be as individualized as possible. You will be creating objects
(machines, exhibits, demonstrations, and so forth), in a virtual
museum designed to teach about programming languages.
- Four (4) Exams, approximately one every four weeks,
using Blackboard
Exams
- Chapter 1, 2, 15
- Chapter 3, 4, LambdaMOO
- Chapter 5, 6, 7,
- Chapter 8, 9, 10, PERL
Exams will be self-paced but timed, Web-based, and taken outside of class.
Relevant Links
Client Software
Some homework assignments will be completed in the
ProgrammingLand MOO, which is an instance of a LambdaMOO
server. In order to do the assignments, you will need access to
an Editing Client. The following are available.
- MacMOOSE available in the NDSU IACC Mac Clusters
- tkMOO-light available in the NDSU IACC PC Clusters or the
SOD Cluster
- Or, for your own use at home, you can download the
following:
Grading
Grades will be assigned according to the customary system:
- A 100%-90%;
- B 89%-80%;
- C 79%-70%;
- D 69%-60%;
- F 59% or less
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Assignments and exams will be scored as follows:
# | Name | Pts |
1 | Assgn#1 | 50 |
2 | Assgn#2 | 50 |
3 | Assgn#3 | 100 |
4 | Assgn#4 | 200 |
5 | Assgn#5 | 100 |
6 | Exam#1 | 100 |
7 | Exam#2 | 100 |
8 | Exam#3 | 100 |
9 | Exam#4 | 100 |
| Total | 800 |
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Policy on Late Assignments
There is no happy way to assign lateness demerits. For the
purposes of this class, it is never too late to turn in work
(until grades are turned in at the end of the semester)
However, the later an assignment is produced, the less it is worth.
Therefore, the policy will be this: late assignments will lose a letter grade immediately, and then another letter grade after one week.
Special Needs
NDSU Academic Affairs New Course Syllabi Requirement
Any student with disabilities or other special needs, who needs
special accomodations in this course, is invited to share these
concerns or requests with the instructor as soon as possible.
Academic Dishonesty or Misconduct
NDSU Academic Affairs New Course Syllabi Requirement
Work in this course must adhere to the Code of Academic
Responsibility and Conduct as cited in "Rights &
Responsibilities of Community: A Code of Student Conduct" (1993)
pp. 29-30. "The academic community is operated on that basis of
honesty, integrity, and fair play. Occasionally, this trust is
violated when cheating occurs, either inadvertently or
deliberately .....Faculty members may fail the student for the
particular assignment, test, or course involved, or they may
recommend that the student drop the course in question, or these
penalties may be varied with the gravity of the offense and the
circumstances of the particular case."
Academic dishonesty can be divided into four categories and
defined as follows:
- Cheating: Intentionally using or attemping to use
unauthorized materials, information or study aids in any
academic exercise.
- Fabrication: Intentional and unauthorized falsification or
invention of any information or citation in an academic exercise.
- Facilitating academic dishonesty: Intentionally or knowingly
helping or attempting to help another to commit an act of
academic dishonesty.
- Plagiarism: Intentionally or knowingly representing the
words or ideas of another as one's own in any academic exercise.
Would you like to know the
Current Time?
Hits since Tuesday, 8/26/03:
Send comments to:
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