Last modified January 19, 2004
Barney Maccabe
maccabe <at> cs.unm.edu
(505) 277-6504
EECE 236B
Office Hours: 3:30-4:45 Tuesdays and Thursdays and by appointmentWenbin Zhu
wenbin <at> cs.unm.edu
(505) 277-1350
FEC 301E
Office Hours: 12:00-1:50 Fridays and by appointment
The Essence of Object-Oriented Programming with Java and UML, Wampler, Addison-Wesley, 2002.
NTHP, Room 122; 2:00-3:15 Tuesday and Thursday
Tapy 217; 3:00-3:50 Monday or Wednesday
If you miss a lecture or a lab session, you are responsible for the material covered in lecture and for obtaining copies of any materials handed out during class.
All students must subscribe to the class mailing list. The mailing list will be used for class announcements.
Week | Dates | Topic | Reading |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 1/19-1/23 | Introduction | Chapters 1through 4 |
2 | 1/26-1/30 | Exception handling, I/O and Streams | |
3 | 2/2-2/6 | UML | Chapter 5 |
4 | 2/9-2/13 | Swing | |
5 | 2/16-2/20 | Patterns | Chapter 7 |
6 | 2/23-2/27 | Invariants and Refactoring | Chapter 8 |
7 | 3/1-3/5 | First Midterm Exam; review (3/2) & exam (3/4) | |
8 | 3/8-3/12 | Tools: Ants, CVS, and Bitkeeper | Chapter 10 |
9 | 3/15-3/19 | Spring Break | |
10 | 3/22-3/26 | Extreme programming | Chapter 9 |
11 | 3/29-4/2 | Profiling & Debugging | Chapter 10 |
12 | 4/5-4/9 | Event driven programming and Threads | |
13 | 4/12-4/16 | Second Midterm Exam; review (4/13) & exam (4/15) | |
14 | 4/19-4/23 | Studio | Chapter 11 |
15 | 4/26-4/30 | Studio | |
16 | 5/3-5/7 | Review | |
17 | Tuesday, 5/11 | Final Exam 12:30-2:30 |
An introduction to the methods underlying modern software development. Specific topics will include object-oriented design and the development of graphical user interfaces. Programming assignments will emphasize the use of objects implemented in standard libraries.
Grading will be based on one of the following weightings:
Percentage of Grade | |
---|---|
Programming Assignments | 55% |
Homework | 10% |
Quizzes | 5% |
Midterm Exams | 15% |
Final Exam | 15% |
There will be five or six programming assignments during the semester. Due dates for the programming assignments will be announced when the assignment is made.
Programs will be turned in using a process that will be described in the lab sessions.
Programming assignments will always be due at 5pm on a Friday afternoon. You may have up to four late days on programming assignments throughout the semester. Once you have used up your allocation of "late days," late programming assignments will not be accepted. Late days are allocated in integral units: a programming assignment truned in at 5:01 on the due date consumes an entire "late day."
There will be four or five homework assignments during the semester. Due dates for the homework will be announced when the assignment is made.
Assignments are due at the start of class. No electronic submissions. Late assignments will not be accepted.
You should turn in your own work. You may discuss exercises with others; however, you must write your own solutions to the exercises.
On occasion throughout the semester, the first 10 minutes of lecture will be used to administer a "pop quiz". These quizzes will require very short answers and will be designed to reward students who are keeping up with the assigned readings and material presented in lecture.
There will not be any "make up" quizzes and students who arrive late to class will not be able to turn in a quiz for that class.
There will be two midterm exams (3/4 and 4/15) and one final exam (5/11). All exams will be cumulative.
Grading will be based on one of the following weightings depending on whether you write a term paper
Without Term Paper | With Term Paper | |
---|---|---|
Homework | 15% | 15% |
Experiments | 10% | 10% |
Term paper | 0% | 10% |
Midterm Exam | 30% | 20% |
Final Exam | 45% | 45% |