7.4

CS 3500: Object-Oriented Design

Syllabus – Fall 2018

Meeting places & times

  • Ben Lerner

  

International Village 019

  

TF

  

9:50am — 11:30am

  • Ben Lerner

  

Behrakis Health Science Center 010

  

TF

  

1:35pm — 3:15pm

  • Amit Shesh

  

International Village 019

  

TF

  

3:25pm — 5:05pm

  • Clark Freifeld

  

Shillman Hall 135

  

TF

  

3:25pm — 5:05pm

Course staff

Instructors

  

Ben Lerner
Ben Lerner
blerner@ccs
326 West Village H

  

Amit Shesh
Amit Shesh
ashesh@ccs
132G Nightingale

  

Clark Freifeld
Clark Freifeld
ccf@ccs
132C Nightingale

Coordinator

  

Alex Grob
Alex Grob
agrob@ccs
214 West Village H

  

  

Staff

  

Agustin Romero
Agustin Romero
romero.a@husky

  

Colin Riley
Colin Riley
riley.colin5@husky

  

Gavin Miller
Gavin Miller
miller.ga@husky

  

Ian Smith
Ian Smith
smith.ian@husky

  

Jake Fecher
Jake Fecher
fecher.j@husky

  

Jean Zhang
Jean Zhang
zhang.je@husky

  

Jeff Choe
Jeff Choe
choe.j@husky

  

Joe Annis
Joe Annis
annis.jo@husky

  

Josh Rosenberg
Josh Rosenberg
rosenberg.jo@husky

  

Kasey Lee
Kasey Lee
lee.kase@husky

  

Kevin Hui
Kevin Hui
hui.k@husky

  

Liam Brown
Liam Brown
brown.lia@husky

  

Michael Smith
Michael Smith
smith.michael1@husky

  

Mohammad Shaikh
Mohammad Shaikh
shaikh.mo@husky

  

Nate Hofmann
Nate Hofmann
hofmann.n@husky

  

Nithin Saripalli
Nithin Saripalli
saripalli.n@husky

  

Pablo Colunga
Pablo Colunga
colunga.p@husky

  

Rheisen Dennis
Rheisen Dennis
dennis.r@husky

  

Tanvi Daga
Tanvi Daga
daga.t@husky

  

Tymofii Kryvtsun
Tymofii Kryvtsun
kryvtsun.t@husky

  

Zerun Tian
Zerun Tian
tian.ze@husky

  

Zhaohao Huang
Zhaohao Huang
huang.zhao@husky

  

  

CCIS Tutors:

  

See here

  

  

Office Hours Schedule

Office hours are spread among several rooms; please check this calendar carefully to know where and when staff will hold their office hours.


General information

CS 3500 teaches a rigorous approach to object-oriented programming and design, with an emphasis on abstraction, modularity, and code reuse as applied to the building and understanding of large-scale systems. We will explore the basic mechanisms and concepts of object-oriented programming: object, class, message, method, interface, encapsulation, polymorphism, and inheritance. Students will gain hands-on experience with tools and techniques that facilitate the creation and maintenance of applications using the Java programming language.

Prerequisites

This course assumes familiarity with programming in the style of How to Design Programs, and basic knowledge of the Java programming language as introduced in CS 2510.

Exams

We will have two examinations:


Materials

Software

For programming assignments, we will use Java 8. You should download and install the Java SE Development Kit, version 8 from Oracle.

The supported IDE (integrated development environment) for the course is IntelliJ IDEA. This is the IDE that the instructor uses in lecture, and we may occasionally give instructions for how to perform particular tasks in IDEA. You are free to use a different IDE, but we may not be able to help you if you run into trouble. IntelliJ IDEA Community Edition may be downloaded free of charge, and you can also license the Ultimate Edition.

If you are having trouble setting up IntelliJ, we have a video demonstrating how to configure your environment here.

Books

There is no required textbook, but you may find these books useful.

Online resources


Lectures

This table specifies the lecture schedule; topics are tentative.

Date

 

Topics (tentative and approximate)

 

Materials

09/07 F

 

Why object-oriented design?

 

notes

09/11 T

 

The essence of objects

 

notes

09/14 F

 

Java review

 

notes and notes

09/18 T

 

Java safari

 

notes

09/21 F

 

Introducing the Model, and the Builder pattern

 

notes

09/25 T

 

Controllers and Mocks;
Class Activity: abstracting I/O

 

notes

09/28 F

 

Encapsulation and Invariants

 

notes

10/02 F

 

Design critique: testing, toString, Marble abstractions, I/O

 

10/05 F

 

Design exercise: Turtles

 

code

10/09 T

 

Command Pattern, Mocks part 2

 

10/12 F

 

Inheritance vs. composition

 

notes

10/16 T

 

Intro to Performance

 

notes and notes

10/19 F

 

Intro to Performance Part 2

 

notes and notes

10/23 T

 

First exam

 

In class

10/26 F

 

Exam review; Introduction to Views, GUI basics

 

notes

10/30 T

 

GUI basics, continued

 

11/02 F

 

Model Review

 

11/06 T

 

The Adapter pattern

 

notes

11/09 F

 

The strategy and decorator patterns

 

notes

11/13 T

 

Class activity: Strategic FreeCell

 

11/16 F

 

Case study: Interpreters

 

code

11/20 T

 

Case study: Interpreters

 

11/23 F

 

No class: Thanksgiving

 

11/27 T

 

Second exam

 

In class

11/30 F

 

TBD

 

TBD

12/04 T

 

Introduction to JavaScript

 


Testing

Testing your code is sufficiently important that we’ve devoted an entire page to it. Please read these notes, for each and every assignment you work on.


Homework schedule

Homework will usually be due at 8:59 PM; the day of the week varies, so you should check each individual assignment to be sure. General homework policies are here.

This homework schedule is tentative and subject to change at the instructor’s discretion.

Link

  

Assigned

  

Due

Assignment 1: Java finger exercises

  

Tue 09/11

  

Tue 09/18

Assignment 2: The Model

  

Wed 09/19

  

Thu 09/27

Assignment 3: Interface Design & Representation Design

  

Fri 09/28

  

Mon 10/08

Assignment 4: The Polymorphic Marble Solitaire

  

Wed 10/10

  

Wed 10/17

Assignment 5: ExCELlence — The Easy Animator: Part 1

  

Mon 10/22

  

Mon 10/29

Assignment 6: ExCELlence in Motion — Seeing is believing

  

Tue 10/30

  

Thu 11/08

Assignment 7: ExCELlence in Editing — Making animations modifiable

  

Fri 11/09

  

Tue 11/20

Assignment 8: ExCELlence in perspective – working with another view

  

Mon 11/26

  

Wed 12/05

Assignment 9: Superior ExCELlence

  

Wed 12/05

  

Wed 12/12


Course policies

Collaboration and academic integrity

You may not collaborate with anyone on any of the exams. You may not use any electronic tools, including phones, tablets, netbooks, laptops, desktop computers, etc. If in doubt, ask a member of the course staff.

Some homework assignments will be completed with an assigned partner, and some may involve a larger team (TBD). You must collaborate with your assigned partner or team, as specified, on homework assignments. You may request help from any staff member on homework. (When you are working with a partner, we strongly recommend that you request help with your partner.) You may use the Piazza bulletin board to ask questions regarding assignments, so long as your questions (and answers) do not reveal information regarding solutions. You may not get any help from anyone else on a homework assignment; all material submitted must be your own. If in doubt, ask a member of the course staff.

Providing illicit help to another student is also cheating, and will be punished the same as receiving illicit help. It is your responsibility to safeguard your own work.

A subtler form of cheating, but nevertheless illegal, is self-plagiarism. This is when you copy and submit code that you developed when you took CS 3500 previously for credit again. This is illegal if done for your group assignments, because the code you are attempting to submit has not been written just by you and your partner in the current semester.

Students who cheat will be reported to the university’s office on academic integrity and penalized by the course staff, at our discretion, up to and including failing the course.

If you are unclear on any of these policies, please ask a member of the course staff.

Homework

In general, you should submit your homework according to the instructions on the web page for the individual assignments.

Using the handin server

You will submit your homework using https://handins.ccs.neu.edu. We have written a how-to guide for using the handin server, if you are unfamiliar with it. (To log in to the handin server, you will need an active CCS account. If you are a CS major or have taken a CS class before, you should have one already. If you have forgotten your account name or password, go to https://my.ccs.neu.edu/ and click on the “Forgot Username” or “Forgot Password” links. If you have never created an account before, click on the “Apply for an account” link in the upper right corner.) Make sure you can log in to the handin server, and register for your section of the course, before the first homework is assigned.

Unlike prior semesters, you will usually need to submit multiple files for your assignments, rather than a single file. You should therefore add all your files to a .zip or .tar file, and submit that archive file. Note:

Additionally, every homework where you write code will be followed one day later by a self-evaluation assignment. Only one partner (for team assignments) needs to complete the self-eval, and it will count for both partners.

Submission troubles

If you have trouble submitting to the server and you have time before the deadline, please wait few minutes and try again; it may also be worth checking on Piazza to find out whether other students are experiencing similar difficulties. If upon retrying you still cannot submit, email Alex Grob (agrob@ccs) or your professor. Your email should have the subject “HW N submission problems” (where N is the appropriate homework number), and you should attach the ZIP file exactly as you would have submitted it to the server.

Late days & late work

Each student gets four free, no-questions-asked late days for the term. The purpose of late days is make the extension process fair and transparent by getting the instructors out of the extension-granting business entirely. Instead, when you need an extension, you can take one—provided you have a late day remaining.

To use a late day, just submit the homework as normal. The server will keep track of the number of used late days, and will prevent you from submitting more than one day late to any assignment, or late at all if you’ve used all your late days. Conserve your late days carefully.

No more than one late day may be used on any one homework. You may not look at and must avoid gaining knowledge of the self-evaluation questions until you have submitted your late assignment. Late days cannot be divided fractionally, but must be used whole. Late days cannot be transferred to or shared with a partner, so in order to take an extension both you and your partner must have sufficient late days remaining. Choose your partners carefully.

Using a late day to submit your files does not automatically grant you a late day for the self-eval: it will remain due at the normal time.

Grades

Your grade will be based on your performance on the problem sets (60%) and the exams (15%, 25%). Material for examinations will be cumulative.

The grades will computed on an absolute basis: there will be no overall curving. The instructor may choose to curve an individual homework or exam, but please do not bank on such a chance.

The mapping of raw point totals to letter grades is given below. Please note that these grade boundaries may move slightly at the discretion of the instructor, but the grade boundary for A is unlikely to change. Grades are not rounded: for instance, earning a 92.5% does not imply we will round up to a 93% and hence to an A.

Range

  

93%

  

90%

  

86%

  

83%

  

80%

  

76%

  

73%

  

70%

  

66%

  

63%

  

60%

  

0%

Letter grade

  

A

  

A-

  

B+

  

B

  

B-

  

C+

  

C

  

C-

  

D+

  

D

  

D-

  

F