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Course : Theory of Computation

Course Number
CMPS3233
Section Number
201
Semester
Spring 2020
Location
Bolin Hall, 320
Days & Times
Final Exam Day/Time
Thursday, May 14, 2020 12:00 am

 

General Objectives

  1. To familiarize students with the foundations and principles of computer science
  2. To learn fundamental principles of the recognition and classification of formal languages

 

Specific Objectives: Upon completion of the course students should be able:

  1. to learn how to create deterministic and non-deterministic automata to accept languages
  2. to understand formal languages and grammars and the machines that recognize them, as wells as the Chomsky hierarchy
  3. to convert between equivalent structures, such as regular expressions to FA, NDFAs to DFAs, etc.
  4. to understand Turing machines, and write Turing machine programs
  5. to understand the concept of computability

Primarily lecture and class participation.  Every student will be required to present assigned problems to the class.  The problems will come primarily from the homework assignments. 

 Final grades will be based on the following criteria. 

Activity

percentage of grade

Quizzes, Boardwork and participation

20%

Homework assignments (including JFLAP)

20%

Two exams

40%

Final (Wed. May 8, 3:30-5:30pm)

20%

Grades may be determined according to this scale (approximate):

A         90% ‑ 100%                                        B         80% ‑ 89%

C         70% ‑ 79%                                          D         60% ‑ 69%

 

 

Makeup Exams and Quizzes:  There is one midterm and one final exam.  The only acceptable reason for missing an exam is with a valid university excuse (e.g., excuse from the doctor, death in the immediate family, etc.)  A makeup exam will only be given to those students who have a valid excuse.  If you know ahead of time that you will miss an exam, please see me.

Note: You may not submit a paper for a grade in this class that already has been (or will be) submitted for a grade in another course, unless you obtain the explicit written permission of me and the other instructor involved in advance.

Plagiarism is the use of someone else's thoughts, words, ideas, or lines of argument in your own work without appropriate documentation (a parenthetical citation at the end and a listing in "Works Cited")-whether you use that material in a quote, paraphrase, or summary. It is a theft of intellectual property and will not be tolerated, whether intentional or not.

Student Honor Creed

As an MSU Student, I pledge not to lie, cheat, steal, or help anyone else do so."

As students at MSU, we recognize that any great society must be composed of empowered, responsible citizens. We also recognize universities play an important role in helping mold these responsible citizens. We believe students themselves play an important part in developing responsible citizenship by maintaining a community where integrity and honorable character are the norm, not the exception.

Thus, We, the Students of Midwestern State University, resolve to uphold the honor of the University by affirming our commitment to complete academic honesty. We resolve not only to be honest but also to hold our peers accountable for complete honesty in all university matters.

We consider it dishonest to ask for, give, or receive help in examinations or quizzes, to use any unauthorized material in examinations, or to present, as one's own, work or ideas which are not entirely one's own. We recognize that any instructor has the right to expect that all student work is honest, original work. We accept and acknowledge that responsibility for lying, cheating, stealing, plagiarism, and other forms of academic dishonesty fundamentally rests within each individual student.

We expect of ourselves academic integrity, personal professionalism, and ethical character. We appreciate steps taken by University officials to protect the honor of the University against any who would disgrace the MSU student body by violating the spirit of this creed.

Written and adopted by the 2002-2003 MSU Student Senate.

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The professor considers this classroom to be a place where you will be treated with respect as a human being - regardless of gender, race, ethnicity, national origin, religious affiliation, sexual orientation, political beliefs, age, or ability. Additionally, diversity of thought is appreciated and encouraged, provided you can agree to disagree. It is the professor's expectation that ALL students consider the classroom a safe environment.

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