Functional Problem Solving (CSC 151 2016S) : Assignments

Information about Exam 3


Exam format

This is a take-home examination. You may use any time or times you deem appropriate to complete the exam, provided you return it to me by the due date.

This examination has a prologue that must be completed by the Friday evening before the exam is due. The prologue is intended to help you get started thinking about the examination. The prologue is required. Failure to fill in the prologue by the designated time will incur a penalty of five points on the examination.

This examination has an epilogue that must be completed by the evening after the exam is due. The epilogue is intended to help you reflect carefully on the examination. The epilogue is required. Failure to fill in the epilogue will incur a penalty of five points on the exam.

There are six problems on this examination. Each problem is worth the same number of points. Although each problem is worth the same amount, problems are not necessarily of equal difficulty.

Please read the entire exam before you begin.

We expect that someone who has mastered the material and works at a moderate rate should have little trouble completing the exam in a reasonable amount of time. In particular, this exam is likely to take you about four hours, depending on how well you've learned the topics and how fast you work. You should not work more than five hours on this exam. Stop at five hours and write “There's more to life than CS” on the cover sheet of the examination and you will earn at least the equivalent of 70% on this exam, provided you recorded the time spent on each problem, filled in the prologue by the specified deadline, filled in the epilogue by the specified deadline, gotten at least two problems mostly right, and arranged for a meeting with me within one week of receiving your graded exam. You may count the time you spend on the prologue toward those five hours, but not the time you spend on the epilogue.. With such evidence of serious intent, your score will be the maximum of (1) your actual score or (2) the equivalent of 70%. The bonus points for errors and recording time are not usually applied in the second situation, but penalties (e.g., for failing to number pages) usually are.

You should not count time reviewing readings, laboratories, or assignments toward the amount of time you spend on the exam or on individual problems.

We would also appreciate it if you would write down the amount of time each problem takes. Each person who does so will earn two points of extra credit for the exam. Because we worry about the amount of time our exams take, we will give two points of extra credit to the first two people who honestly report that they have completed the exam in four hours or less or have spent at least four hours on the exam. In the latter case, they should also report on what work they've completed in the four hours. After receiving such notices, we may change the exam.

Academic Honesty

This examination is open book, open notes, open mind, open computer, open Web. However, it is closed person. That means you should not talk to other people about the exam. Other than as restricted by that limitation, you should feel free to use all reasonable resources available to you.

As always, you are expected to turn in your own work. If you find ideas in a book or on the Web, be sure to cite them appropriately. If you use code that you wrote for a previous lab or homework, cite that lab or homework as well as any students who worked with you. If you use code that you found on the course Web site, be sure to cite that code. You need not cite the code provided in the body of the examination.

Although you may use the Web for this exam, you may not post your answers to this examination on the Web. And, in case it's not clear, you may not ask others (in person, via email, via IM, via IRC, by posting a please help message, or in any other way) to put answers on the Web.

Because different students may be taking the exam at different times, you are not permitted to discuss the exam with anyone until after we have returned it. If you must say something about the exam, you are allowed to say “This is among the hardest exams I have ever taken. If you don't start it early, you will have no chance of finishing.” You may also summarize these policies. You may not tell other students which problems you've finished. You may not tell other students how long you've spent on the exam.

You must include both of the following statements on the cover sheet of the examination.

  1. I have neither received nor given inappropriate assistance on this examination.
  2. I am not aware of any other students who have given or received inappropriate assistance on this examination.

Please hand write, sign, and date each statement separately. Note that the statements must be true; if you are unable to sign either statement, please talk to me at your earliest convenience. You need not reveal the particulars of the dishonesty, simply that it happened. Note also that “inappropriate assistance” is assistance from (or to) anyone other than Professor Rebelsky.

Exams can be stressful. Don't let the stress of the exam lead you to make decisions that you will later regret. Violations of academic honesty and exam policies will be handled through the Committee on Academic Standing, the College Hearing Board, or the Computer Science Department's Academic Honesty Policy, as appropriate.

Presenting Your Work

You must present your exam in two forms, physically and electronically.

For the physical copy, you must write all of your answers using the computer, print them out, number the pages, staple them together (except for the cover sheet), and hand me the printed copy. For your benefit and for ours, we are doing blind grading on this examination, so you have been assigned a number to use on your exam. Please make sure that your number appears at the top of every page. You should turn in a separate cover sheet along with your stapled and printed answers. The cover sheet should include (1) the two hand-written academic honesty statements (individually signed and dated, if it is appropriate for you to sign each), (2) your name, and (3) your assigned number. If you choose to invoke the “there's more to life than computer science” option, then you must indicate that option on the cover sheet, and you should indicate it only on the cover sheet.

The code and comments in your printed copy must use a fixed-width (a.k.a., monospaced or fixed-pitch) font; depending on what platform you use, viable candidates include Monospace, Courier, Courier New, Monaco, DejaVu Sans Mono, Free Mono, Liberation Mono, and Lucida Sans Typewriter. Failure to format your code with a monospace font will result in a penalty. You may read the instructions on printing for more details on how to create readable output.

You must also submit the code for your examination at http://bit.ly/151-2016S-exam3code. Please include the whole code file, including the supplied code that appears at the bottom of the template file.

In both cases (physical and electronic), you should put your answers in the same order as the problems. Failure to number the printed pages will lead to a penalty. Failure to turn in both versions may lead to a much worse penalty.

While your electronic version is due at 10:30 p.m. Tuesday, your physical copy will be submitted in class on Wednesday. It is presumed the physical copy matches the electronic copy. Any discrepancies (other than formatting) will likely be considered a misrepresentation of your work and referred appropriately.

In many problems, we ask you to write code. Unless we specify otherwise in a problem, you should write working code and include examples that show that you've tested the code informally (by looking at what value you get for various inputs) or formally (by using the Rackunit testing framework). In addition to the examples provided in the exam, you should also provide additional examples. Do not include resulting images; we should be able to regenerate those.

Unless we tell you otherwise, you should assume that you need to provide 6P-style documentation for each primary procedure you write. If you write any helper procedures, you must document them with 6P-style documentation using at least the first four P's (Procedure, Purpose, Parameters, Produces).

Just as you should be careful and precise when you write code and documentation, so should you be careful and precise when you write prose. Please check your spelling and grammar. Because we should be equally careful, the whole class will receive one point of extra credit for each error in spelling or grammar you identify in the preliminaries and problems on this exam. We will limit that form of extra credit to five points.

We will give partial credit for partially correct answers. We are best able to give such partial credit if you include a clear set of work that shows how you derived your answer. You ensure the best possible grade for yourself by clearly indicating what part of your answer is work and what part is your final answer.

Getting Help

I may not be available at the time you take the exam. If you feel that a question is badly worded or impossible to answer, note the problem you have observed and attempt to reword the question in such a way that it is answerable.

I will also reserve time at the start of classes the week the exam is due to discuss any general questions you have on the exam.

Checklists

Since many students regularly seem to miss different elements of the exam, these checklists serve as a way to help you remember everything that you have to do.

Big Picture

  • Have you made a copy of the exam code?
  • Have you replaced the 000000 in the exam code with your random number?
  • Have you picked up a random number?
  • Have you filled out the prologue? (Goal: ASAP; Due: Friday)
  • Have you done your requisite work on the exam? (Due: Tuesday)
  • Have you gone over the contents of your exam using the checklist below? (Due: Tuesday)
  • Have you submitted the code online? (Due: Tuesday)
  • Have you filled out the epilogue? (Due: Wednesday)
  • Have you written a cover sheet and gone over the cover sheet checklist? (Due: Wednesday)
  • Have you printed your examination and gone over the printed exam checklist? (Due: Wednesday)

Exam Contents

  • Have you reviewed the question and answer section of the exam?
  • Have you removed all identifying materials from your code, other than your assigned id number?
  • If you've copied any code, have you also copied the accompanying documentation?
  • Have you cited all the code that you've relied upon?
  • Have you recorded how long each problem took?
  • Have you included examples or test suites for each primary procedure you've written?
  • Have you documented each procedure you've written, including each helper procedure? (Your helper procedures only need the first four P's.)
  • Have you checked your spelling?

Printed Version

  • Did you remove the supplied code from the end of the copy of the exam that you're printing?
  • Did you print double sided (if possible)?
  • Did you use a monospace font?
  • Have you written or printed your id on every page?
  • Have you written or printed the page number on every page?
  • Have you looked at the output to make sure that there are no instances in which the code wraps badly?

Cover Sheet

  • Have you written your id on the cover sheet?
  • Have you written your name on the cover sheet?
  • Have you hand written, signed, and dated the first academic honesty statement? (This item assumes you consider it appropriate to sign the first academic honesty statement.)
  • Have you hand written, signed, and dated the second academic honesty statement? (This item assumes you consider it appropriate to sign the second academic honesty statement.)