Undergraduate Course: Informatics 1 - Functional Programming (INFR08013)
Course Outline
	
		| School | 
		School of Informatics | 
		College | 
		College of Science and Engineering | 
       
	
		| Course type | 
   	    Standard | 
		Availability | 
		Available to all students | 
     
	
		| Credit level (Normal year taken) | 
		SCQF Level 08 (Year 1 Undergraduate) | 
		Credits | 
		10 | 
       
	
		| Home subject area | 
		Informatics | 
		Other subject area | 
		None | 
       
	
		| Course website | 
		http://www.inf.ed.ac.uk/teaching/courses/inf1 | 
 
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		| Course description | 
		An introduction to the concepts of programming, using a functional programming language. Students learn to solve small-scale problems succinctly and at an abstract level without being bogged down in details. | 
      
 
Course Delivery Information
 |  
| Delivery period: 2010/11  Semester 1, Available to all students (SV1) 
  
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WebCT enabled:  No | 
Quota:  None | 
 
	
		| Location | 
		Activity | 
		Description | 
		Weeks | 
		Monday | 
		Tuesday | 
		Wednesday | 
		Thursday | 
		Friday | 
	 
| Central | Lecture |  | 1-11 |  14:00 - 14:50 |  |  |  |  |  | Central | Lecture |  | 1-11 |  |  11:10 - 12:00 |  |  |  |  
| First Class | 
Week  1, Monday,  14:00 - 14:50,  Zone: Central. Lecture Theatre 5, Appleton Tower  |  
Summary of Intended Learning Outcomes 
    
		1 - Solve simple programming tasks (for example, convert a number into a string for the corresponding roman numeral). 
2 - Define appropriate data types (for example, to represent parse trees for arithmetic expressions). 
3 - Perform case analysis, use recursion (for example, evaluate a parse tree for an arithmetic expression to yield a value). 
4 - Read and write programs that use basic list processing functions (nil, cons, append, length, take, drop, zip, concat). 
5 - Read and write programs that use list comprehensions and higher-order functions (map, filter, fold). 
6 - Choose appropriate decompositions of problems to create a program to solve that problem. 
7 - Compose a functional program from suitable function definitions, including their types. 
8 - Document programs effectively. 
9 - Apply basic techniques to test and debug programs. | 
     
 
Assessment Information 
    
        Written Examination	90 
Assessed Assignments	10 
Oral Presentations	0 
 
Assessment 
Formative assessment will be used to provide feedback and guidance to students and will take the form of quizzes, exercise sheets, practical exercises and coursework assignments, covering areas from across the syllabus. A summatively assessed class test (worth 10% of the final mark) will be held mid semester and will test students basic programming competence. 
 
If delivered in semester 1, this course will have an option for semester 1 only visiting undergraduate students, providing assessment prior to the end of the calendar year. | 
     
    
        | Please see Visiting Student Prospectus website for Visiting Student Assessment information | 
     
 
Special Arrangements 
    
		| Not entered | 
      
 
Contacts 
	
		| Course organiser | 
		Dr Ewan Klein 
Tel: (0131 6)50 2705 
Email: ewan.klein@ed.ac.uk | 
  		Course secretary | 
		Ms Kirsten Belk 
Tel: (0131 6)50 5194 
Email: kbelk@staffmail.ed.ac.uk | 
       
 
    
    
      
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copyright  2010 The University of Edinburgh - 
 1 September 2010 6:09 am
 
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