CS 145 Lab 6 – Conditional Statements
Welcome to lab 6! If you have checkpoints from the last lab to show your instructor or TA, do so immediately. No credit will be given if you have not already completed the work, nor will credit be given after the first 10 minutes of this lab. In this lab, we’ll explore conditional statements, which […]
CS1: Lecture 20 – If Bifurcations
Dear students, The software we can now write feels alive. We can get user input. We can ask questions about it. And we can respond in different ways with conditional statements. These conditional statements appear in three general forms. Last time we saw the diversion form, in which we perform some extra work when a […]
Progress in Twoville
Today was a non-teaching day, so I made some “progress” in Twoville: You could summarize my professional career as one long effort to get to the point where I can express non-trivial ideas about shapes and animations in around 30 lines of code that doesn’t need to be compiled.
CS1: Lecture 19 – If Diversions
Dear students, We’ve seen the computer as a calculator, crunching numbers. We’ve seen the computer as a chef, calling upon recipes of code. We’ve seen the computer as a philosopher, considering truths about our data. Now it’s time to let those truths drive our computer’s actions. We will see the computer as a pilot, navigating […]
CS1: Midterm 1
See the questions and answer sheet.
CS1: Lecture 18 – Midterm 1
Dear students, Today we have a midterm instead of our regularly scheduled lecture. I am providing a list of the methods that you may or may not need as you complete the exam. Here’s your TODO list to complete before we meet again: Homework 3 is officially assigned. It is due October 25. You must […]
Triangular Colors
Last week I was trying to think of boolean predicates that I could use for exercises in an introductory programming class. I remembered the triangle inequality, which states how the lengths of three line segments must relate if they are to be formed into a triangle. In short, each segment must be shorter than the […]
Power Set of Venn Diagrams
In our introductory programming class, I try to reframe abstract logic into concrete spatial thinking. One way I do this is through the game Trux Falsy. Another way is through Venn diagrams. I want students to see how the AND operator creates an intersection, how the OR operator creates a union, and how DeMorgan’s Law […]
CS1: Lecture 17 – Short-circuiting and Venn Diagrams
Dear students, Today’s our last day of talking about booleans as an independent idea. We will examine an unexpected behavior of our logical operator friends and then discuss one more way to visualize logic: the Venn diagram. Short-circuiting Next up we’ll examine the following piece of code. What is the output from each statement? public […]
CS 148 Lab 6 – Logical Expressions
Welcome to lab 6! If you have checkpoints from the last lab to show your instructor or TA, do so immediately. No credit will be given if you have not already completed the work, nor will credit be given after the first 10 minutes of this lab. In this lab, we’ll explore the logical operators […]