1 assoc. prof. stoyan bonev, phd, computer science dept. the american university in bulgaria...
TRANSCRIPT
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Assoc. Prof. Stoyan Bonev, PhD,Computer Science dept.
The American University in Bulgaria
e-mail:[email protected]
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INF160IS Development Environments
AUBG, COS dept, Spring 2014
Reference books:Baltzan Paige, Business Driven Information Systems, McGraw-Hill/Irwin, 3e, 2012.Doar Matthew B., Practical Development Environments, O’Reilly, 2005.Any C++, C#, Java, VBasic book available in AUBG library
Course lecturer: Assoc. Prof. Stoyan Bonev, PhD
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INF160 IS Development Environments AUBG, COS dept, Spring 2014
Lecture 00Title:
A Concise Course Presentation
(Extract from Syllabus)
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Lecture Contents:
Spring 2014 Course Schedule The LecturerCourse History/ChronicleReferencesCourse Contents
Declaration of Ethics
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Spring 2014 Course Schedule
One INF160 section:INF160a
Wednesday 10:45 – 12:00 Friday 09:00 – 10:15
COS lab – MB120
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The Lecturer
Lecturer: Assoc. Prof. Stoyan Bonev, PhD COS dept, AUBG
Office: 243Tel.(ext.): 419e-mail: [email protected] Hours: see list on office door
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Course History/Chronicle
Short course history This course offered three times (Fall 2011, Spring 2012, Spring 2014)
Course id and full name: INF160 Information Systems Development Environments or Inf Sys Dev Env or ISDE
The Recommended Textbooks
Baltzan Paige, Business Driven Information Systems, McGraw-Hill/Irwin, 3e, 2012.
Doar Matthew B., Practical Development Environments, O’Reilly, 2005.
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Recommended TextbooksC++:Lafore R., Object-Oriented Programming in C++, SAMS
Publishing, 4e, 2002.Friedman F., E.Koffman, Problem Solving, Abstraction
and Design Using C++, IE Pearson Education, Addison Wesley, 5e, 2007.
C#: Joyce Farrell, MS Visual C# 2010: An Introduction to
OOP, Course Technology, Cengage Learning, 4e, 2011.Barbara Doyle, C# Programming, From Problem Analysis
to Program Design, Course Technology, Cengage Learning, 3e, 2010.
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Recommended TextbooksJava:Y.Daniel Liang, Introduction to JAVA Programming,
Comprehensive version, 9e, IE, Pearson, Prentice Hall, 2013.
Malik D. S., JAVA Programming, From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Course Technology, Cengage Learning, 4e, 2010.
Farrell Joyce, JAVA Programming, Course Technology, Cengage Learning, 5e, 2010.
Bruce Eckel, Thinking in JAVA, 4e, 2006.Flanagan D., JAVA in a Nutshell, A Desktop Quick
Reference, O’Reilly, 5e, 2005.
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Recommended TextbooksJavaScript:Scott Duffy, How to Do Everything with
JavaScript, McGraw-Hill/Osborne, 2003.Don Gosselin, JavaScript, Course Technology,
Cengage Learning, 5e, 2011.
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Course Contents Information Systems and Development Environments
Definition, Classification, IS life cycle Programming Languages
VBasic – review C++, C#, Java – Program structure and tutorial introduction
Applications Console applications, Windows GUI applications, Web applications
Ways of building Software Development Environments
MS Visual Studio, Code::Blocks, BloodShed Dev C++, SharpDevelop, Eclipse, NetBeans, JGrasp, BlueJ
Data Collections – evolution of array as a concept Reading/Writing data from/to secondary storage
File I/O processing, Data Bases and RDBMS
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Course Contents in DetailsINF160 Course syllabus and .ppt files of the
course lectures are available on Student server Root: H:\shared SubFolder: INF160
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Course Grading Grading:
Final exam: 20% Midterm Tests: 2x25 50%Class Project: 18% Quizzes: 4x3 12%
Students will get a score in the range 0-100 for each of the components. The total score (computed with the above coefficients) will be used to form the final grade:
A–, A (excellent) scores 90-100 90 - - - - - 96 96-100 B–, B, B+ (good) scores 80-90 80-83 83-86 86-90 C–, C, C+ (average) scores 70-80 70-73 73-76 76-80 D, D+ (poor) scores 60-70 60 - - - - - 66 66-70 Scores below 60 mean F (failure).
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Course Grading
Component: Final exam: 1 x 20%
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Course Grading
Component: Two Midterm tests: 2 x 25%
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Course Grading
Component: Class project: 1 x 18%
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Course Grading
Component: Quizzes: 4 x 3%
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Course Grading
Component: Final exam: 1 x 20%
Component: Two Midterm tests: 2 x 25%
Component: Class project: 1 x 18%
Component: Quizzes: 4 x 3%
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AttendanceStudents are expected to attend all classes
(lectures and exercises). An attendance register will be taken at each class.Students who miss three classes will be dropped
from the course.Mobile phones ringing in class disturb the whole
class.Please switch off your mobile phone before each
class.
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Academic Honesty
Students are expected to demonstrate academic behavior in full capacity of the term.
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Declaration of Ethics
This set of .PPT files presenting the INF160 course contents (including slides style and mostly contents) was created using publicly available sources from Pearson Higher Education Resource Center.
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Declaration of Ethics (from Pearson Higher Education Resource Center)
File Download This work is protected by United States copyright laws and is provided solely for the use of instructors in teaching their courses and assessing student learning. Dissemination or sale of any part of this work (including on the WWW) will destroy the integrity of the work and is not permitted. The work and materials from this site should never be made available to students except by instructors using the accompanying text in their classes. All recipients of this work are expected to abide by these restrictions and to honor the intended pedagogical purposes and the needs of other instructors who rely on these materials.
Accept Cancel
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Thank You For
Your Attention!