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Tue 17 Jan - Wed 18 Jan 2012
14:15 - 17:00

Venue: New Museums Site, Cockcroft Lecture Theatre

Provided by: University Information Services - Digital Literacy Skills


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Programming Concepts: Introduction for Absolute Beginners
BeginnersPrerequisites

Tue 17 Jan - Wed 18 Jan 2012

Description

This course is part of the Scientific Computing series.

This course is aimed at those new to programming, or who have never been formally taught the principles and basic concepts of programming. It provides an introduction to the basic concepts common to most high level languages (including Python, Java, Fortran, C, C++, Visual Basic). The aim of the course is to equip attendees with the background knowledge and confidence necessary to tackle many on-line and printed programming tutorials. It may also help attendees in deciding which programming language is suitable for their programming task.

Knowledge of the concepts presented in this course is a pre-requisite for many of the other courses in the Scientific Computing series of courses (although not for the "Python for Absolute Beginners" course).

Prerequisites
  • Basic computer skills will be assumed
  • No prior programming experience is required. This course is unsuitable for those with significant programming experience.
Sessions

Number of sessions: 2

# Date Time Venue Trainer
1 Tue 17 Jan 2012   14:15 - 17:00 14:15 - 17:00 New Museums Site, Cockcroft Lecture Theatre map Bruce Beckles
2 Wed 18 Jan 2012   14:15 - 17:00 14:15 - 17:00 New Museums Site, Cockcroft Lecture Theatre map Bruce Beckles
Topics covered
  • What is a program?
  • What is scientific programming?
  • Compiled and interpreted languages
  • Computer arithematic: integer and floating-point arithmetic
  • Variables: data and data types
  • Pointers
  • Controlling the flow of a program: decision statements and loops
  • Functions and libraries
  • Exit status
  • Exceptions and exception handling
  • Objects and classes
  • Regular expressions
  • Types of programming task
  • Structuring your programming task
  • Structuring programs
  • Object oriented programming (OOP)
  • Checkpointing
  • Testing your program
  • Principles of good programming practice
Format

Presentations.

Notes

The course notes will be made available in due course.

Duration

Two half day sessions

Themes

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