Sergio AntoyTeaching Assistant
office: FAB 120-26
e-mail: antoy@cs.pdx.edu (checked daily)
phone: 503-725-3009 (checked weekly)
homepage: http://www.cs.pdx.edu/~antoy/
office hours: MW 9:00 AM, and by appointment, no on Wed Oct 29th,
class time and location: see the CS scheduleContact point for everything related to the course except homework, unless you have a homework issue that you were not able to resolve with the TA .
Steven LibbyDescription
e-mail: slibby@pdx.edu
office hours: Monday 1:00-2:00, Tuesday 10:00-11:30, Thursday 11:30-1:00
location: Fishbowl (FAB 120)Contact point for everything related to homework: questions, clarifications, solutions, grades, submissions by e-mail, etc.
This course is an introduction to the study of programming languages. It presents both general principles and specific details about the definition, implementation and use of historical and contemporary languages. It combines both theory and application of programming language features. Diverse programming paradigms, such as functional, logic and object-oriented, will be discussed in class and used in exercises.Format
Regular lectures. Weekly assigned readings. Weekly homework including programming assignments. Midterm and final exams.Goal
Understanding, learning, and analyzing, in a disciplined and comprehensive way, concepts inherent to programming languages. Knowledge of key issues and goals in the design, implementation and use of programming languages. Some literacy in programming languages. Ability to code a problem into a program using different programming paradigms.Notes
The expected preparation is a bachelor degree in Computer Science or equivalent background.Course materialsCS558 is a required course for the MS and PhD degrees in Computer Science and it is the foundation of several other graduate courses. Students are encouraged to take CS558 early in their program of study.
In addition to personal equipment, all the students are expected to have a departmental computer account. See http://www.cat.pdx.edu/ for obtaining the account.
Grading
- Textbook Programming Languages: Principles and Practices, 3rd Edition Louden/Lambert, ISBN10: 1-111-52941-8, ISBN13: 978-1-111-52941-3, 2012.
- Schedule by topic (will be updated during the term).
- Homework (same as the schedule).
- Skills and Knowledge necessary to pass this course.
- Resource page for coding and executing programs in various languages.
- Instructions to access recorded lectures when available.
- Midterm Fall 2006 and Final Fall 2008 sample exams.
- Evaluations Fall 2006, Winter 2007, and scores and comments Fall 2008.
Assignments, midterm and final exams will contribute approximately 25%, 30%, and 45% of the grade, respectively. You will need at least 80% of the points for an A and at least 60% for a B.
Contact: antoy@cs.pdx.edu
Mon Aug 11 09:20:50 PDT 2014