1 / 37

A Puzzle for You

A Puzzle for You. Puzzle. Someone is working for you for 7 days You have a gold bar, which is segmented into 7 pieces, but they are all CONNECTED You have to pay the person 1 segment at the end of each day You can only break the bar in two places! How do you pay your worker?.

betrys
Download Presentation

A Puzzle for You

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Puzzle for You

  2. Puzzle • Someone is working for you for 7 days • You have a gold bar, which is segmented into 7 pieces, but they are all CONNECTED • You have to pay the person 1 segment at the end of each day • You can only break the bar in two places! • How do you pay your worker?

  3. Welcome to BCS 465!

  4. Agenda • Introductions • Course overview • Official outline • What will we cover? • Why a course in programming? • Programming Introduction

  5. Introductions David Bath Office: C2012 Drop by for a chat! Phone: 416-491-5050 x6230 Office Hours: See web site Web Site: http://people.senecac.on.ca/david.bath E-mail: david.bath@senecac.on.ca

  6. About Me • Eigth year at Seneca • Both Business and IT background • Experience working in finance /technology • Have taught many of the BCS courses

  7. About You…. • Introductions

  8. Course Overview • Course Outline • Informal: • What is this course about? • Why is it important, really?

  9. Text • An Introduction to Programming using Visual Basic .Net (Fifth Edition) By David I. Schneider

  10. “Modes of Evaluation” (i.e., marking scheme) Cases, assignments and project 35% Two tests (20% each) 40% Final exam 25% Total 100%

  11. Expectations/Policies • You need to be in class! – this is a difficult course for BCS students!!! • Programming is not about memorizing information • It’s about grasping and applying new skills • You’ll be responsible for in-class material and assigned readings • Deadlines will be strictly enforced! • Late penalties will be applied • Cheating absolutely will not be tolerated!

  12. Expectations • If you have a problem, I can help… But you have to bring it to my attention…

  13. Course Overview • An introduction to programming • Understand how software is developed • Develop fundamental programming skills • Which can be applied in many areas! • Strengthen problem solving ability • Give you a taste of the discipline

  14. About Programming and VB • The primary concern is that you grasp the concepts • The concepts that you will learn are applicable to virtually ANY programming language • Visual Basic happens to be the platform which we are using to learn the concepts • Added bonus that VB is a widely applicable language, and that it is fast and easy to build useful applications

  15. Why Study Programming? • Isn’t this too much technical detail for a business student? • Not at all! • There are many reasons that a course in programming will benefit you

  16. Do you want to… …Work in business/systems analysis or Project Management? • Understand how the technology can be applied to meet customers’ needs • Manage and/or understand development and delivery process/schedules • Communicate with technical staff, and your customers’

  17. Do you want to… …Work in Web Design/Development? • Plan dynamic and/or interactive web sites • Interface web sites with backend systems (e.g., databases)

  18. Do you want to… …Work in IT? • Write scripts to perform configuration(e.g., login scripts) • Write scripts to automate tasks (e.g., add 500 users)

  19. Do you want to… …Get a taste of as many areas as possible, so that you can choose the best career path? • This course will help you find out if programming is an attractive area to you …do well in job interviews?

  20. Career Options • Business + Tech = Excellent skill set • In reality, it you can pursue anything between the two extremes- Options! • Programming is a fundamental technology discipline, and you need to understand it to have a complete base Pure technology Pure Business

  21. The Course!

  22. Today’s Topic An Introduction to Programming

  23. How many of you like Math?

  24. How many of you like puzzles and problems?

  25. How many of you can give good directions?

  26. How many of you can TELL people how to cook or build things? …Not SHOW, but TELL… (Or have told people how to mix complicated drinks?)

  27. If you answered yes to these questions… • You may find that you like programming! • Programming, in a very pure sense, is problem solving • You have a task that you want to accomplish, and you have to find a way to accomplish it • Programming revolves around finding a set of steps to perform the task • Instructions!

  28. Exercise: Directions • Here is your first programming-type assignment! • I need to get from this lab, down to the cafeteria • You need to give me precise directions! • Work in pairs, to write out a set of directions

  29. Taking it up: Some issues • Were your directions correct? • Were the instructions: • Not detailed enough? • Too detailed? • How do we know how detailed the steps should be?

  30. The Language! • If we are programming a computer, the language tells us exactly which instructions the computer understands • If you know what instructions the computer understands, you know exactly how much detail is needed • E.g., Visual Basic uses different commands than Java • In the planning stage, you need to use your judgment

  31. Exercise: Putting a list of numbers in Order • I’m going to place eight numbers, written on pieces of paper, on the board • They aren’t in order! • You can do the same at your desk • You need to put them in order from highest to lowest • Known as ‘Sorting’

  32. Sorting • This is a very easy task for you to do by hand, on a particular set of numbers • However, I don’t want you to give me the instructions for this particular set • You need to come up with a set of steps that will work on ANY list!

  33. Sorting • This is a much tougher problem! Suggestion: • Do it a few times by hand • While you are doing it, PAY ATTENTION TO THE STEPS YOU TAKE • Try to find a well-defined method that works every time • Write down the steps of your method! • Test them!

  34. Sorting: Taking it up • Did you have any luck? • Don’t worry if you didn’t! • Let’s look at a few approaches

  35. Algorithms • The algorithm is the central idea in programming • A procedure, or set of steps, which will accomplish a certain task • E.g., sorting a list! • The algorithm is independent of programming language • It should work on any platform! • The algorithm is most important! • Implementing it in a given language comes afterward

  36. Next problem! • Create an algorithm for a chess game!

  37. For next class • Make sure that you get the textbook • Find the weekly schedule on my web site • Do the readings for week 1!

More Related