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Full-Text Articles in Computer Engineering

Cs 242-02: Introduction To Computer Science Iii, Praveen Kakumanu Jan 2005

Cs 242-02: Introduction To Computer Science Iii, Praveen Kakumanu

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

This is the final course in the three course sequence "Introduction to Computer Science" offered by the Computer Science department, WSU. It focuses on building a number of abstract data types such as stacks, queues, trees, and tables. We continue to study the C++ object oriented concepts such as Inheritance, polymorphism, and template handling. We also start learning to analyze the complexity of algorithms in this course.


Cs 208-01: Computer Programming For Business I, Dennis Kellermeier Jan 2005

Cs 208-01: Computer Programming For Business I, Dennis Kellermeier

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

CS 208 is the first of a two quarter sequence in programming for business students. It is required for Management Information Science majors. The courses are designed to help students achieve a high degree of facility in intermediate levelprogramming. This course assumes students have never written a program before.


Cs 141-01: Computer Programming I, Robert Rea Jan 2005

Cs 141-01: Computer Programming I, Robert Rea

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

CS 141 is dedicated to teaching the fundamentals of computer programming The concepts covered in this class will be applied using the Java programming language.


Cs 142-01: Computer Programming - Ii, Ronald F. Taylor Jan 2005

Cs 142-01: Computer Programming - Ii, Ronald F. Taylor

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

Concepts introduced in CS 141 are developed in greater detail and depth with the Java programming language. Topics include object oriented programming, graphics, development of user interfaces and handling runtime errors with an emphasis on program verification and testing. Students must register for both lecture and one laboratory section. 4 credit hours. Prerequisite: CS 141 (Computer Programming I) and MTH 127 (College Algebra) or equivalent.


Cs 205-01: Computer Literacy And Office Automation, John P. Herzog Jan 2005

Cs 205-01: Computer Literacy And Office Automation, John P. Herzog

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

Basic computer terminology, word processing, spreadsheets, databases, and graphics.


Cs 205-08: Computer Literacy And Office Automation, Kim Gros Jan 2005

Cs 205-08: Computer Literacy And Office Automation, Kim Gros

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

No abstract provided.


Cs 209-02: Computer Programming For Business With Java, Ii, Robert Rea Jan 2005

Cs 209-02: Computer Programming For Business With Java, Ii, Robert Rea

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

CS 209 is the second of a two quarter sequence in programming for business students. It is required for Management Information Science majors. The courses are designed to help students achieve a high degree of facility in intermediate-level programming in Java.


Cs 241-01: Computer Science Ii, Mateen M. Rizki Jan 2005

Cs 241-01: Computer Science Ii, Mateen M. Rizki

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

No abstract provided.


Cs 240-01: Introduction To Computer Science, Eric Maston Jan 2005

Cs 240-01: Introduction To Computer Science, Eric Maston

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

We will develop basic techniques to design, develop and implement programs using the C++ language. This course focuses on basic elements of programming and assumes no knowledge of programming in C++.


Cs 241-02: Computer Science Ii, L. Jane Lin Jan 2005

Cs 241-02: Computer Science Ii, L. Jane Lin

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

This course is the second in the three course sequence "Introduction to Computer Science" offered by the Computer Science department, WSU. It focuses on tools for building abstract data types (using structure and class concepts in C++) and Object-Oriented Programming. We also begin the study of data structures in this course. For all CS 241 students, concurrent registration into CS 241 lab is a must.


Cs 241-03: Introduction To Computer Science Ii, Praveen Kakumanu Jan 2005

Cs 241-03: Introduction To Computer Science Ii, Praveen Kakumanu

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

This course is the second in the three course sequence "Introduction to Computer Science" offered by the Computer Science department, WSU. It focuses on tools for building abstract data types (using structure and class concepts in C++) and Object-Oriented Programming. We also begin the study of data structures in this course. Note: For all CS 241 students, concurrent registration into CS 241 lab is a must.


Cs 242-02: Introduction To Computer Science Iii, Eric Maston Jan 2005

Cs 242-02: Introduction To Computer Science Iii, Eric Maston

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

This is the third and final course in the Introduction to Computer Science series. This course focuses on data structures with abstract data types, such as trees, stacks, queues and tables.


Cs 405/605-01: Introduction To Database Management Systems, Guozhu Dong Jan 2005

Cs 405/605-01: Introduction To Database Management Systems, Guozhu Dong

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

Survey of logical and physical aspects of data base managements systems. Data models including entity-relationship (ER) and relational are presented. Physical implementation (data organization and indexing) methods are discussed. Query languages including SQL, relational algebra, relational calculus, and QBE are introduced. Students will also gain experience in creating and manipulating a database. The course is mostly concerned with the design and querying of databases. A follow up course, CS701 is concerned with the design of system functions for managing databases.


Cs 466/666: Introduction To Formal Languages, Thomas Sudkamp Jan 2005

Cs 466/666: Introduction To Formal Languages, Thomas Sudkamp

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

CS 466/666 is an introduction to formal language and automata theory. In this course we will examine two methods for defining and recognizing languages: generating languages using grammars and accepting languages using finite state machines. Along with presenting the fundamentals of these two topics, the course will develop and investigate the relationships between these approaches. The focus will be two important families of languages, the regular languages and the context-free languages. We will exhibit the importance of the formal techniques by considering their application to the definition of programming languages and pattern matching. The text will be the second edition …


Cs 400/600: Data Structures And Software Design, Michael L. Raymer Jan 2005

Cs 400/600: Data Structures And Software Design, Michael L. Raymer

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

No abstract provided.


Cs 415: Social Implications Of Computing, Leo Finkelstein Jan 2005

Cs 415: Social Implications Of Computing, Leo Finkelstein

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

CS 415 is a communication skills course using as its subject matter current salient issues associated with the social implications of computing. In addition to the course text, you will need to use certain reading materials in the library and elsewhere, and you will be responsible for using concepts and theories provided in class lectures and discussions.


Cs 740-01: Algorithms, Complexity And The Theory Of Computability, Thomas Sudkamp Jan 2005

Cs 740-01: Algorithms, Complexity And The Theory Of Computability, Thomas Sudkamp

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

No abstract provided.


Cs 480/680: Comparative Languages, Krishnaprasad Thirunarayan Jan 2005

Cs 480/680: Comparative Languages, Krishnaprasad Thirunarayan

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

This course will introduce fundamental concepts and paradigms underlying the design of modern programming languages. For concreteness, we study the details of an object-oriented language (e.g. Java), and a functional language (e.g. Scheme). The overall goal is to enable comparison and evaluation of existing languages. The programming assignments will be coded in Java 5.0 and in Scheme.


Cs 765-01: Foundations Of Neurocomputation, Mateen M. Rizki Jan 2005

Cs 765-01: Foundations Of Neurocomputation, Mateen M. Rizki

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

This course is designed to help you develop a solid understanding of neural network algorithms and architectures. At the end of this course you should be able to read and critically evaluate most neural network papers published in major journals, (e.g. IEEE Transaction on Neural Networks, Neural Networks, and Neural Computation). IN addition, you should be able to implement a broad range of network architectures and learning algorithms for a variety of applications.


Cs 790-03: Advanced Data Mining, Guozhu Dong Jan 2005

Cs 790-03: Advanced Data Mining, Guozhu Dong

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

In this course we will cover advanced topics in data mining. We will study some classic papers and some important recent paper, on different types of applications, in this fast evolving field.


Cs 790-02: Multimedia Coding And Communication (I), Yong Pei Jan 2005

Cs 790-02: Multimedia Coding And Communication (I), Yong Pei

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

No abstract provided.


Cs 209-01: Computer Programming For Business Ii, Dennis Kellermeier Jan 2005

Cs 209-01: Computer Programming For Business Ii, Dennis Kellermeier

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

CS 209 is the second of a two quarter sequence in programming for business students. It is required for Management Information Science majors. The courses are designed to help students achieve a high degree of facility in intermediate level programming.


Ceg 220-01: Introduction To C Programming For Engineers, Robert Helt Jan 2005

Ceg 220-01: Introduction To C Programming For Engineers, Robert Helt

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

This course provides a general introduction to computers as a problem-solving tool using the C programming language. Emphasis is on algorithms and techniques useful to engineers. Topics include data representation, debugging, and program verification. 4 credit hours. Prerequisite: MTH 229 (Calculus I).


Ceg 210-01: Pc Networking I, Karen Meyer Jan 2005

Ceg 210-01: Pc Networking I, Karen Meyer

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

No abstract provided.


Ceg 221-01: Advanced C Programming For Engineers, Robert Helt Jan 2005

Ceg 221-01: Advanced C Programming For Engineers, Robert Helt

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

This course introduces advanced constructs, algorithms, and data structures in the C programming language. Emphasis is on problem solving and techniques useful to engineers. Topics include functions, array, pointers, structures as well as sorting algorithms, linked lists, complex numbers, stacks, queues, hashtables, and binary trees. 4 credit hours.


Ceg 402/602-01: Introduction To Computer Communication, Bin Wang Jan 2005

Ceg 402/602-01: Introduction To Computer Communication, Bin Wang

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

No abstract provided.


Ceg 260-01: Digital Computer Hardware/Switching Circuits, Eric Maston Jan 2005

Ceg 260-01: Digital Computer Hardware/Switching Circuits, Eric Maston

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

We will discuss and cover basic number and logic systems. Labs will be used to gain valuable "hand's on" experience in implementing elementary circuits and logic designs.


Ceg 416-01: Matrix Computations, Daniel C. Lee Jan 2005

Ceg 416-01: Matrix Computations, Daniel C. Lee

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

This course is a survey of numerical methods in linear algebra for application to problems in engineering and the sciences. Emphasis is on using modern software tools on high performance computing systems. This course covers the mathematics of linear equations, eigenvalue problems, singular value decomposition, and least squares. Material covered will be relevant to application areas such as structural analysis, heat transfer, neural networks, , mechanical vibrations, and image processing in biomedical engineering. A student should familiarize himself/herself with Matlab. All programming assignments will be done in Matlab. A basic knowledge of matrix algebra is required. Prerequisite: MTH 253 or …


Ceg 333: Introduction To Unix, Maite Trujillo Jan 2005

Ceg 333: Introduction To Unix, Maite Trujillo

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

Introduction to the use of UNIX and UNIX tools as a problem-solving environment. Emphasis on the shell, files and directories, editing files, user process management, compiling, and debugging.


Ceg 411/611-01: Introduction To Software Computer Engineering, Jack Jean Jan 2005

Ceg 411/611-01: Introduction To Software Computer Engineering, Jack Jean

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

No abstract provided.