Difference between revisions of "Weekly Schedule 20133 - OOP344"
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Revision as of 13:37, 26 September 2013
OOP344 | Weekly Schedule | Student List | Teams | Project | Student Resources
Under construction!
Week 1 - Sep 3
This Week 1
- Introduction to Open Source development.
- Collaboration Tools:
- Wiki
- Blog
- IRC
- Code Repository
- Git, Svn, ....
- Big Blue Button
- Etherpad
- Object Orientation Review
- C Review
- main Function return value
- pointers
- pointers and arrays
To Do 1
Due Sep 6th (Friday) 18:00
- Create an account on github
- Make sure your account name is presentable. This name will stay with you forever.
- Make sure your information on github is complete (real name, email, etc...)
- Send ONE email to me(Fardad) containing your git hub id
- subject of the email should be 344Github20133
- email content
- name: Your Name (exactly as it appears on your Seneca student card)
- nickname: Your Nick name (how friends usually call you)
- Git hub ID: your Github id
Due by Sep 8th, 23:59
- Create a blog (anywhere you like or use the one you already have)
- Join the IRC by registering your nickname on freenode server and joining the #seneca-oop344 channel for 344 related dialog
- Additional channels of interest: #seneca to interact with all Seneca students participating in opensource projects, and #seneca-social for Social (off-topic) dialog.
- Read Pro-git book
- Chapter One and Chapter Two
- Create an account on this wiki: send an email to cdot-wiki-admin@senecac.on.ca and ask for an account, an email will be sent back to you with your userid and a temporary password; make sure you have the following included in your email.
- Email subject: Wiki Account Request
- The subject you are enrolled in: "OOP344"
- Your Seneca user id
- Send this email from your Seneca Account only
- Learn how to do basic editing in a wiki
Resources 1
- Etherpad
- Git
- Pro-git book
- GIT for OOP344 Projects
- Great 15 minutes tutorial that will give you basic understanding of Git
- Git GUI Client for Mac
- Github Client for Windows
- Generating SSH keys for github
- Wiki
- How to register your IRC nickname on freenode
- Compare IRC clients
- How To edit Wiki pages
- How To edit Wiki Cheatsheet
- Blogs
- IRC:
- Clients:
- How to Install XChat
- IRC Basic Commands
Week 2 - Sep 10
This Week 2
- C++ Review (Lecture)
- Pointers and arrays
- Object Orientation
- Classes and privacy
- Helpers and Friends
- Inheritance and polymorphism
- Operators
- Dynamic Memory
- pre-processor directives
To Do 2
- If you have not already, request an account on this wiki (admin email can be found on wiki login page, top right of the screen)
- Add your information to The Student List as soon as possible
- Git Exercise: (You need to generate an SSH key before you can do this exercise)
- Fork the exercise 1 repo from github into your account
- Clone the repo in your account to your local machine
- Open the solution in Visual Studio 2012
- Find the errors in the program and fix them (Discussing this on the IRC channel is encouraged, but supplying answers is frowned upon)
- Check your output against the oop344-ex1-output to be sure you corrected the program properly
- Once complete, add the file to your git stage and commit it with a message that details what you did to fix the program
- Push the commit back to your git repository
Resources 2
- Single resource that will give you all the knowledge you need about pointers, including information given in the last two classes. WARNING! Reading online tutorials is NOT a substitute to visiting in-class lectures.
- Type Casing in C++.
- Void Type
- Function Pointers
Week 3 - Sep 17
This Week 3
- pre-processor directives
- macros
- Conditional Compilation
- Operators
- logical
- lazy eval
- consts
- values
- pointers
- methods
- void pointers
- default args
- typedef, (including C usage)
- namespace
link title== Headline text ==
To Do 3
- Write a program called basicMath:
$ bm 2 + 3<Enter> $ 5 $ bm 2 x 3<Enter> $ 6 $ bm Heehaw the hoohoo<Enter> $ bm <number> <+-x/> <number><ENTER>
- Write a function that receives the env[] array and an environment variable name and returns the value.
- Write a function called strncat that concats several strings
strncat(des, "Hello", " I am ", "testing ", "this!", 0);
Code these, blog and discuss it.... link title
Blog Posts
- Wei-Hao Lo's Solution for basicMath Problem.
- Here is my Solution to basicMath problem:
*:Zhen's slight improvement to Adam's code *:Adam's code
- Andrew's Solution for basicMath problem:
*:Len's slight improvement to Andrew's code *:Len's code
- Zach's Solution for basicMath problem:
- Zhen's Solution for basicMath problem:
*:Ragu's slight modification to Zhen's code *:Ragu's Code
- Sehui's Solution for basicMath problem:
- Mohammad's Solution for basicMath problem:
- Kirill's Solution for basicMath problem:
- Brad's Solution for basicMath problem:
- Dima's Solution for basicMath problem:
- Qin's Solution for basicMath problem:
- Benson's Solution for basicMath problem:
- Luke Jingwei Sun@YorkBuster's Solution for the BasicMath problem:
Takes advantage of: *:GitHub *:Object Oriented Concepts which include the class *:Preprocessor macro *:Namespace *:GitHub source code of all stages(Feel free to folk and improve)
- Dimple's solution for basicmath problem
- Roman's solution for basicmath problem
- Hyunsu Lee's solution for basicmath problem
- Justin Chow's magnificent solution to the basicmath problem
- Yunki Lee's solution for basicmath problem
- Andrey's solution for basicmath problem
- Nak Gui's solution for basicmath problem
Resources 3
- Void Pointers
- macros - Variable arguments list
- Command Line Arguments
Week 4 - Sep 24
This Week 4
- Project introduction
- Project Diagram (as drawn in class)
- bio, cio
- Declaration modifiers
- compilation process
- Real Signature of main()
- Variable Argument list
To Do 4
- Download project from github (do not fork, your code must remain private)