CMSC 341 Data Structures Fall 2006
Section 0201 Mondays and Wednesdays, 5:30-6:45
ITE 229
Mr. Mitch Edelman
Announcements
Wednesday 12/6 Final Exam review will be held Monday, 12/11 AND Tuesday, 12/12.
Both sessions start at 7:00 and are in ACIV 151
Wednesday 9/20 The review for exam 1 will be held on Monday, 9/25, in room BIOL 120
Course Description
We will discuss a number of topics essential to your growth as a computer
science student. Data Structures are the primary topic. You will learn to
design and analyze core data structures and algorithms that use them.
You will also study the relationships among data structures, their
utility in various situations, and factors affecting their performance.
You will learn to analyze the time complexity of algorithms, and how to choose
appropriate data structures and algorithms.
Textbooks
Required: Data Structures and Algorithm Analysis in C++,
3rd Edition, by Mark Alan Weiss, Addison-Wesley, ISBN 0-321-37531-9
Recommended:
- Your favorite C++ reference book -- here are some of mine
- The C++ Programming Language, Special Edition by Bjarne
Stroustroup
Addison-Wesley, 2000, ISBN 0-201-70073-5
- C++ Primer, Third Edition by Stanely B. Lippman,
Josee Lajoie
Addison-Wesley, 1998, ISBN 0-201-82470-1
- C++ FAQs, Second Edition by Marshall Cline, Greg
Lomow, Mike Girou
Addison-Wesley, 1999, ISBN 0-201-30983-1
- Effective C++ Second Edition by Scott Meyers
Addison-Wesley
- More Effective C++ by Scott Meyers
Addison-Wesley
- Thinking in C++ by Bruce Eckel.
This book is available in its entirety on the web at
http://www.mindview.net/Books/TICPP/ThinkingInCPP2e.html
- Data Structures and Algorithm Analysis by Clifford
Shaffer,
Prentice-Hall, 1996. This book has good coverage of data structures and
algorithm
analysis in C++. It has excellent descriptions of a number of data
structures.
- Data Structures, Algorithms, and Applications in C++ by
Sartaj Sahni, McGraw-Hill, 1998. Covers some material not covered by
the Heileman text.
- Data Structures and Algorithms by Alfred Aho, John
Hopcroft, and Jeffrey Ullman, Addison-Wesley, 1983. This is one of the
all-time classics, written in Pascal.
- Fundamentals of Data Structures by Ellis Horowitz, Sartaj
Sahni, and Dinesh Mehta, 1995. Another classic. In C++.
- Abstract Data Types by Nell Dale and Henry Walker, D.C.
Heath and Company, 1996. A high-level view of data structures and
algorithms, with no programming language specified. A very worthwhile and modern
text with an alternative viewpoint.
Prerequisites
We will assume that you have mastered the material from CMSC 201,
CMSC 202,
and CMSC
203, including mastery of the C++ language. We will not review
material that has been covered in the prerequisite courses. We do cover
a few of the concepts from CMSC 202, but from a deeper
point-of-view. A few advanced C++ topics such as templates and
exceptions will be reviewed.
Grading
Your grade for this course will be based on
5 programming projects, 2 in-class exams and the final exam. Please note
that your grade depends on all 5 projects and 3 exams. It is a very
bad idea not to turn in all projects.
Each programming project is 8% of your grade, each exam is 20%
of your grade. The exams focus on materials not yet tested. In other
words, they are mostly non-cumulative.
Note that the due dates for the projects and the
dates of the exams are already set (q.v., the syllabus and project
policy handout). Please plan your schedules accordingly. Makeup exams will
not be given.
Your final letter grade is based on the standard formula:
0 <= F < 60, 60 <= D < 70, 70 <= C < 80,
80 <= B < 90, 90 <= A <= 100
These levels may be adjusted slightly in your favor, but grades will
not be "curved" in the conventional sense.
The grade you earn is based on timely work done during the semester;
incomplete grades will only be given for medical illness or other such
dire circumstances.
Attendance and Readings
You are expected to attend all lectures. You are responsible for all
material covered in the lectures. NOTE: some lecture materials are
not covered in the textbook. You should keep up with the assigned readings
during the semester. Some reading material will be made available through the
course web page. You are responsible for the material in the readings,
even if it is not covered during lecture.
If you plan to do well in this course . . .
you will need to keep up with the materials. Falling behind is
a certain recipe for transforming this course into a seriously
painful and notably unsatisfying experience.
You should plan on doing some coding in addition to the
assigned projects. Play around with the supplied code. Find out
how it works. John Holt said, "We learn something by doing it.
There is no other way."
Participate in class discussions and ask questions. Your classmates
will appreciate it.
Contacting Me or the TAs
Please feel free to visit me, the other professors, or the TAs during
our office hours. If you can't make it during the regular hours, please
ask for an appointment.
We will do everything we can to be available to provide help with this
course. Office hours, phone numbers and other
contact information is
available on-line. If you need to contact any of the course staff
outside of lecture and office hours, email is much better than the
telephone. You should, however, observe the following etiquette:
- Don't email program code. If you want me or the TA to
help you debug your code, submit it, even if you plan on attending
office hours. After you submit the code in the usual way,
send email about the problem. We will look at the submitted code. Please,
do NOT mail code to me or to the TA!
- Note that the Help Center does not offer help with code for this
course.
- Please use your real name, and please use the umbc mail system.
I average around a half dozen pieces of mail a day, wrapped in about 200 pieces of
what could politely be called "junk". You probably don't want the spam filter
to flush your mail, so
- Include a meaningful subject line, something like "CMSC 341
Project 2 question."
Academic Integrity
Cheating in any form will not be tolerated. Instances of cheating will
be reported to the UMBC Academic Conduct Committee. These reports are
filed by the Committee and can be used for disciplinary action such as
a permanent record on your transcript. Academic honesty is absolutely
required of you. You are expected to be honest yourself and to report
any cases of dishonesty you see among other students in this class.
Reports of dishonest behavior will be kept anonymous.
Further details on honesty in doing projects for this course are
on-line at the Project
Policy link.
NOTE: having another student's code in your possession at any time
is cheating. We have your code online, and we check all your work for
evidence of copying code. In the event of 2 or more students submitting
copied code, all involved parties will be subject to disciplinary action.
You are encouraged to study together for exams, but
examinations are to be your own work -- not your neighbor's and not
your notes. All exams are closed-book, closed-notes. Only pencils (or
pens) and erasers are permitted in the exam room unless otherwise
indicated. Scratch paper is provided to you, as needed. Having any
other materials in your possession during an exam will be taken as
evidence of cheating and dealt with accordingly.
Class Schedule
Class |
Date
|
Topic
|
Reading
|
1
| Wed Aug 30
| Introduction and C++
| MAW 1
|
2
| Wed Sep 6
| C++ and OOP
| MAW 1
|
| Wed Sep 6
| Project 1 Assigned
|
|
3
| Mon Sep 11
| Asymptotic Analysis
| MAW 2
|
4
| Wed Sep 13
| Asymptotic Analysis
| MAW 3
|
5
| Mon Sep 18
| List ADT and Implementations
| MAW 3
|
6
| Wed Sep 20
| List Implementations
| MAW 3
|
| Wed Sep 20
| Project 1 Due
|
|
7
| Mon Sep 25
| Stacks, Queue, Deque ADT
| MAW 3
|
8
| Wed Sep 27
| Exam 1
| Classes 1 - 7
|
| Wed Sep 27
| Project 2 Assigned
|
|
9
| Mon Oct 2
| Introduction to Trees
| MAW 4.1 & 4.2
|
10
| Wed Oct 4
| Introduction to Trees
| MAW 4.1 & 4.2
|
11
| Mon Oct 9
| Binary Search Trees
| MAW 4.3
|
12
| Wed Oct 11
| Binary Search Trees
| MAW 4.3
|
| Wed Oct 11
| Project 2 Due
Project 3 Assigned
|
|
13
| Mon Oct 16
| Splay Trees
| MAW 4.5
|
14
| Wed Oct 18
| Red-Black Trees
| MAW 12.2 + notes
|
15
| Mon Oct 23
| Red-Black Trees
| MAW 12.2 + notes
|
16
| Wed Oct 25
| B-Trees
| MAW 4.7
|
| Wed Oct 25
| Project 3 Due
|
|
17
| Mon Oct 30
| B-Trees
| MAW 4.7
|
18
| Wed Nov 1
| K-D trees
| MAW 12.6
|
19
| Mon Nov 6
| Exam 2
| Classes 9 - 18
|
20
| Wed Nov 8
| Priority Queues and Heaps
| MAW 6
|
| Wed Nov 8
| Project 4 Assigned
|
|
21
| Mon Nov 13
| Priority Queues and Heaps
| MAW 6
|
22
| Wed Nov 15
| Hashing
| MAW 5
|
23
| Mon Nov 20
| Hashing
| MAW 5
|
24
| Wed Nov 22
| Skip Lists
| MAW 10.4.2 + notes
|
| Wed Nov 22
| Project 4 Due
|
|
25
| Mon Nov 27
| Disjoint Sets
| MAW 8
|
| Mon Nov 27
| Project 5 Assigned
|
|
26
| Wed Nov 29
| Graphs
| MAW 9.1, 9.3 + notes
|
27
| Mon Dec 4
| Graphs
| MAW 9.1, 9.3 + notes
|
28
| Wed Dec 6
| Graphs
| MAW 9.1, 9.3 + notes
|
| Sun Dec 10
| Project 5 Due
|
|
29
| Mon Dec 11
| Review
|
|
|
| Monday Dec 18, 6:00-8:00 PM
|
Final Exam
| Classes 20 - 28
|
- Dates and topics are subject to change as required by class
progress
- MAW = Weiss text "Data Structures & Algorithm Analysis
in C++"
Course Web Page
A few handouts will be provided in paper form at the first class. After
that, all handouts will be provided only on the web. The course web
page URL
is
www.cs.umbc.edu/courses/undergraduate/341/fall06/index.shtml
Please check the web page frequently. Any changes to the page will be
mentioned in the "Latest News" link.
email: edelman@cs.umbc.edu
Back up to Fall 2006 CMSC-341 Homepage