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projects

pct0 (bonus; due 20230823)
wcp1 (due 20230823)
abc0 (due 20230830)
btt0 (due 20230830)
pct1 (bonus; due 20230830)
pct2 (due 20230830)
wcp2 (due 20230830)
mpg0 (due 20230906)
pct3 (bonus; due 20230906)
wcp3 (due 20230906)
pct4 (due 20230913)
ttb0 (due 20230913)
wcp4 (due 20230913)
pct5 (bonus; due 20230920)
ttb1 (due 20230920)
wcp5 (due 20230920)
dap0 (due 20230927)
gfo0 (due 20230927)
pct6 (due 20230927)
wcp6 (due 20230927)
cgf0 (due 20231004)
pct7 (bonus; due 20231004)
wcp7 (due 20231004)
bwp1 (bonus; due 20231018)
cgf1 (due 20231018)
pct8 (due 20231018)
wcp8 (due 20231018)
cgf2 (due 20231025)
pct9 (bonus; due 20231025)
wcp9 (due 20231025)
cgf3 (due 20231101)
gfo1 (due 20231101)
pctA (due 20231101)
wcpA (due 20231101)
pctB (bonus; due 20231108)
waq0 (due 20231108)
wcpB (due 20231108)
pctC (due 20231115)
waq1 (due 20231115)
wcpC (due 20231115)
bwp2 (bonus; due 20231129)
pctD (bonus; due 20231129)
wcpD (bonus; due 20231129)
gfo2 (due 20231206)
pctE (bonus; due 20231206)
wcpE (bonus; due 20231206)
EoCE (due 20231214)
haas:fall2023:data:projects

Table of Contents

Corning Community College

CSCS2320 Data Structures

Assignments, Documents, Information, and Projects

Projects

pct0 (bonus; due 20230823)
wcp1 (due 20230823)
abc0 (due 20230830)
btt0 (due 20230830)
pct1 (bonus; due 20230830)
pct2 (due 20230830)
wcp2 (due 20230830)
mpg0 (due 20230906)
pct3 (bonus; due 20230906)
wcp3 (due 20230906)
pct4 (due 20230913)
ttb0 (due 20230913)
wcp4 (due 20230913)
pct5 (bonus; due 20230920)
ttb1 (due 20230920)
wcp5 (due 20230920)
dap0 (due 20230927)
gfo0 (due 20230927)
pct6 (due 20230927)
wcp6 (due 20230927)
cgf0 (due 20231004)
pct7 (bonus; due 20231004)
wcp7 (due 20231004)
bwp1 (bonus; due 20231018)
cgf1 (due 20231018)
pct8 (due 20231018)
wcp8 (due 20231018)
cgf2 (due 20231025)
pct9 (bonus; due 20231025)
wcp9 (due 20231025)
cgf3 (due 20231101)
gfo1 (due 20231101)
pctA (due 20231101)
wcpA (due 20231101)
pctB (bonus; due 20231108)
waq0 (due 20231108)
wcpB (due 20231108)
pctC (due 20231115)
waq1 (due 20231115)
wcpC (due 20231115)
bwp2 (bonus; due 20231129)
pctD (bonus; due 20231129)
wcpD (bonus; due 20231129)
gfo2 (due 20231206)
pctE (bonus; due 20231206)
wcpE (bonus; due 20231206)
EoCE (due 20231214)

Class Stats

URLs

C Programming tutorials:

Algorithmic Efficiency:

Pointers:

Week 1

  • Welcome!
  • be sure to look over the syllabus, and start on the ael0 project (use 'grabit' on lab46, or ask on discord)
  • Review, ask questions on C and pointers.
    • try writing sample code employing various concepts
    • pointers are a fixed size, regardless of data type
      • why? MEMORY ADDRESSING
      • on lab46 (running on a 64-bit OS/system), memory addresses are 64-bits (64/8 = 8 bytes)
        • so all pointers (whether char, int, float, etc.) will be 8 bytes in size on this system.
      • on other systems, notably 16-bit and 32-bit systems (especially late-era hardware that might have incorporated tweaks to support more memory than is typically accessible by the default machine word size), memory address sizes can vary.
      • takeaway: for code portability, do not assume 8 byte memory addresses. ALWAYS use sizeof() to maximize portability.
haas/fall2023/data/projects.txt · Last modified: 2023/12/14 12:32 by 127.0.0.1