Before you get started
This class requires you to do a LOT of work between homeworks (4), reading assignments (a dozen or so),
reading the textbooks, a pretty large project, and two exams.
Grading is quite strict as well, in that failure to get a passing grade in, say, the project will
you a failing grade in this class. Put it another way, you cannot get around work by skipping assignments
and hoping to pass based on a good class average.
I'm not trying to scare you into not taking this class, I just want you know full well what you're getting yourself into.
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Class participation will help settle borderline grades. While class attendance is not taken, your instructor believes
that regular class attendance is important and expects students to actively participate in class. Questions and comments
are always welcome.
Late Work
All work that you turn in must be submitted on the Blackboard before
midnight (Central Time) the day the work is due.
I understand that from time to time you'll get overwhelmed with work, or that you may have personal problems
that will make you less productive than you'd like. That's why each student in this class has a credit of
five (5) days for late work.
You can use this credit as you see fit, for good reason or no reason at all, all at once or in pieces -- though
there is no fractional credit. The only thing we ask for is that, in your Blackboard submission
(in the COMMENT field) you indicate how much of your credit you want to use.
After you've used your "late work credit", or if you don't want to use it, there is
a 5% per calendar day penalty for late work.
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Academic Honesty
All the work you submit must be individual, including, but not limited to, those cases
when your instructor has approved pair-programming for you; in these cases the only thing that
may be identical with somebody else's is code.
Academic dishonesty will not be tolerated. IIT has a strict academic honesty policy; here are the top points:
-
The misrepresentation of any work submitted for credit as the product of a student’s sole
independent effort, such as using the ideas of others without attribution and other forms of plagiarism.
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The use of any unauthorized assistance in taking quizzes, tests or examinations.
-
The acquisition, without permission, of tests, answer sheets, problem solutions or other
academic material when such material has been withheld from distribution by the instructor.
-
Deliberate harmful obstruction of the studies, research or academic work of any member of
the IIT community.
-
Making material misrepresentation in any submission to or through any office of the university to a
potential employer, professional society, meeting or organization.
-
The intentional assistance of others in the violation of the standards for academic honest.
You can read IIT's Code of Academic Honesty
here. You should read it until you fully understand it.
A good way to test whether you understand it is to try to explain it to somebody else.
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Programming Language(s)
For any of the assignments in this class, including the project, please feel free to use any of the free and/or
open-source (FOSS)
object-oriented programming languages in the set {Java, Ruby, JavaScript}.
You may even use Smalltalk if you want to, however this will make testing somewhat more difficult for us.
Before you start, please check with your instructor to make sure he's ok with it.
Work done using languages other than specified above, as well as the linking of free and open-source sofware
with proprietary 3rd party libraries will not be accepted.
To learn more about free software check out the Free Software Foundation.
You should also know that free software is not the same thing as open-source software,
this article from the
GNU foundation clarifies the matter for you.
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Test Environment
All programming work you do for this class will be tested on our computer(s) running a fresh
instalation of Ubuntu 10.04 (Lucid Lynx).
I'm sorry, but the fact that your code runs on your computer and not on ours is not enough to earn
you credit for your work.
If you've been using Linux, then this requirement is very easy to satify. If you're new to Linux, then
you'll have some learning to do, which is a very good and valuable thing.
Let me repeat, we're not going to test under any version of Windows, nor are we going to do it under
any other Unix variant other than the one described above.
If your application requires things (e.g. libraries, plug-ins, gems, etc.) that don't come with the standard
distribution, then you should tell us, in the README file you provide with your other deliverables, how to install
required dependencies.
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Unit Testing
We're all tired of bad software, whether because it crashes when we least expect it or because of security
holes that allow the bad guys to take over our systems and identities. We all pretty much despise software
maintenance, in particular when we're asked to modify code that we never touched, don't really understand,
and have no way of making sure our changes don't damage existing functionality.
The good news is that we can do something about it. Creating (automated) unit tests for all your code is a
very good start. Doing it in Test-Driven Development fashion is even better.
You cannot possibly get full credit for your work unless each and every method in your classes has good
unit testing. By good I mean meaningful and sufficient:
- A unit-test that just asserts true is not meaningful.
- Providing only one unit test for a method that requires multiple tests is not sufficient.
You will be required to measure and include with your deliverables the unit test coverage as measured
by the tool of choice in your chosen programming language, e.g. jCoverage for Java, Rcov for Ruby, etc.
As a general rule unit testing will account for 50% of your mark in any assignment, of which 3/5 is
assigned to unit test coverage, and the other 2/5 will be awarded based on how good your tests are.
If you fail to submit unit testing, then you cannot expect to get more than 50% in the assignment.
Unit test coverage above 80% is required for full credit. Unit test coverage below 50% doesn't earn you any credit.
For anything in between, you get one percentage point of credit for each percentage point of unit test coverage.
For example, if your test coverage is 73%, then the most credit you can get for unit testing is 30-(80-73)=23. In another
example, if the unit test coverage is 51%, then the most credit you can get is 30-(80-51)=1.
Unit tests that are useless will be removed and the coverage will be measured again before a mark
is assigned for your work.
The other 20 percentage points for unit test coverage will be equally spread between the methods of your code. If you
fail to write any unit test for a method, then you lose the corresponding percentage points; we will have discretion
to give you less than full credit if you haven't written enough unit-tests for a method.
For example, if your code has 10 methods across three (3) classes, then you get 20/10=2 percentage
points of credit for unit tests written per each method. Another way to look at this is to say that you lose
two (2) percentage points for each method that doesn't have any unit test.
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Project
The purpose of the project is to give you the opportunity to practice the concepts discussed
in this class. The requirements are purposely somewhat vague such that you can interact with the client
(that's your instructor) to figure out the detailed requirements.
In addition to various deliverables you have to produce throughout the semester and a working product
on the due date of the project, you are expected to develop a lot of automated
unit tests as you work on this project.
You'll be required to review the project of a peer, comment on it and make critical recommendations
for its improvement. 20% of you "Project" mark will be tied to how well you grade your peer's project.
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