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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
(1-6). Either propose and develop a project (under direction of instructor) or perform supervised research on a project initiated by a professor. [Prereq: IA. Rep.]
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1.00 - 4.00 Credits
Individual study on selected problems. Hours TBA. [Rep.]
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4.00 Credits
Concepts; historical background; computer systems; algorithmic processes; control structures; scalar data structures and arrays; structure programming in C++. [Prereq: MATH 11 5 or MPT3 15 or math code 50. Weekly: 3 hrs lect, 2 hrs lab.]
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3.00 Credits
An introduction to the domain of software design, including abstract data types, specifications, complexity analysis, file organization, sorting and searching, and database organization. [Prereq: CS 131 or IA. Weekly: 2 hrs lect, 2 hrs lab.]
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3.00 Credits
Principles of computer architecture from a layered point of view, including data representation, machine language execution, addressing modes, and symbolic assembly language. Fundamental notions of operating systems, interfacing, and communication are also introduced. [Prereq: CIS 132 or IA. Weekly: 2 hrs lect, 2 hrs lab.]
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3.00 Credits
A study of the design of computers. Topics include the design of combinatorial and sequential circuits, design methodology of a basic computer, central processor organization, microprogramming, memory organization, input-output organization, and arithmetic processor design. [Prereq: CS 233.]
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3.00 Credits
Object orientation; event handling; abstract windowing toolkit applets; applications; Java database connectivity; applications programming interface and Java doc. [Prereq: CS 131 or CIS 230. Service fee.]
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3.00 Credits
Introduction to key algorithmic concepts and constructs. Algorithmic development, tracing, and analysis. Algorithm construction and analysis in both non-executable contexts and within programming environments. [Prereq: MATH 253, CS 132.]
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3.00 Credits
Concepts in object-oriented, event-driven graphic user interface (GUI) programs to develop/implement computer applications for Windows environment. [Prereq: CS 131 or CIS 130 or 230 or 235 or 291 or IA.]
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3.00 Credits
Design/implementation concepts for relational model. Enterprise and entity-relationship modeling. Schema development: normalization; SQL data definition and data manipulation language; user-defined types, rules, and triggers to support the schema. Features to support integrity, ease of use, and control: concurrency, locking, distribution, performance. [Prereq: CIS 230, 250, 260 or CS 233; MATH 253 recommended. Weekly: 2 hrs lect, 2 hrs lab.]
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