Programming and Algorithms (2018–2019)

Peter Dawyndt · Universiteit Gent

Welcome to the Dodona course for the modules Computational Biosciences (Ghent University, Master of Science in Biology) and Programming and Algorithms (Ghent University, Master of Science in Statistical Data Analysis). The course contains Python programming exercises that support automated feedback. The exercises are categorized into ten series according to programming technique.

The learning path below contains a sequence of tasks assigned to each week of the semester. These include the chapters in the course book that must be read in preparation of the lectures, additional assignments in preparation of solving the programming exercises, tips & tricks you can use when solving the exercises, and a list of mandatory exercises that must be submitted before the weekly deadlines on Tuesday evening 22:00. Please note that the ISBN exercises are also included in the mandatory exercises, and must be submitted as well before the weekly deadlines on Tuesday. Sample solutions for the ISBN exercises can be found on Minerva. Keep an eye on the overview to track mandatory exercises for which you have already submitted a (correct) solution.

In computing the examination mark we take into account both permanent evaluation (20%, 4/20) and periodic evaluation (80%, 16/20). The permanent evaluation has two components that both influence the score for the permanent evaluation.

For the first part of the permanent evaluation, the students have to work on a series of 60 mandatory exercises. Based on the covered programming techniques, these exercises are subdivided into 10 series of 6 mandatory exercises each. The first exercise of each series always is a variation on the manipulation of ISBN numbers. A sample solution of this exercise is available from Minerva, and in an accompanying instruction video we explain how we came to this sample solution. As such, the ISBN exercises explain how the new programming technique from the series can be brought into practice. After these preparatory steps, students are ready to apply the new programming technique themselves in solving the other five programming exercises from the series. Students must submit their solutions of the mandatory exercises in each series (including the ISBN exercise) through the online learning environment Dodona before a set deadline (deadlines always fall at 22:00 on the Tuesday that follows the hands-on session dedicated to the series of exercises). Dodona gives students a nice overview of the mandatory exercises in each series, the submission deadlines and the current status of each exercise.

For the second part of the permanent evaluation, we organise two evaluation sessions during the hands-on sessions that follow after five exercise series. During these evaluations, students have to solve two new programming exercises within the time frame of two hours. It is allowed to make use of the Dodona platform during the evaluations, so that students can check the correctness of their solutions at all times. The submitted solutions for the evaluation exercises are manually evaluated by the lecturer or the teaching assistants and scored based on correctness, programming style used, choice made between the use of different programming techniques and the overall quality of the solution. The level of difficulty of the evaluation exercises is lower than those of the exercises that need to be solved during the periodic evaluation (exam), as we mainly want to check at this time during the semester if the students master the basic programming skills. In addition, these evaluation sessions follow the same procedure that is also used during the periodic evaluations, so that students can use this experience to adjust their approach towards the exam.

The score for the permanent evaluation is determined using the formula s * c / a, where s is the score a student has obtains based on his submitted solutions for the evaluation exercises (expressed as a score out of 20), c is the number of mandatory exerices for which at least one correct solutions has been submitted before the weekly deadlines, and a is the total number of mandatory exercises (30 per evaluation series). A student that for example has obtained a score of 16/20 for his evaluation exercises and that has submitted correct solutions for all 30 mandatory exercises before the weekly deadlines, obtains a score of 16 * 30/30 = 16 out of 20 for the evaluation series. If that student still had obtained a score of 16/20 for his evaluation exercises, but only submitted 18/30 correct solutions for the mandatory exercises before the weekly deadlines, he sees his score for the evaluation series reduced to 16 * 18/30 = 9.6 out of 20.

Students will receive an email with their score for the evaluation series as soon as possible after each evaluation session. During the next hands-on session, students can collect their submitted solutions that will have been annotated with feedback that indicates where they can improve their code. They can use this feedback in solving other programming exercises.

It is not possible to retake the permanent evaluation during the second examination period.

To compute the examination mark we compute two scores. One score takes into account both the score for the permanent evaluation (weight 20%) and the periodic evaluation (weight 80%). The other score ignores the score obtained for the permanent evaluation and is only based on the score for the periodic evaluation. The final examination mark is the maximum of these two scores.

During the periodic evaluation (exam) students are given 3.5 hours to solve three programming exercises. It is allowed to make use of the Dodona platform during the periodic evaluation, so that students can check the correctness of their solutions at all times and receive immediate feedback on the correctness and the programming style of their submitted solutions. To determine the score for the periodic solution, the submitted solutions are manually evaluated by the lecturer or the teaching assistants and scored based on correctness, programming style used, choice made between the use of different programming techniques and the overall quality of the solution.

You are not a member of this course.

Register

Exercise series

series 01: variables, expressions and statements
October 02, 2018 22:00

series 02: conditional statements
October 09, 2018 22:00

series 03: loops
October 16, 2018 22:00

  • Python book: read chapters 2 and 3
  • specific tips & tricks for mandatory exercises (english, dutch)
  • additional exercises about control loops
Title Class progress Status
ISBN
Generators
The frog prince
Early warning
Elevator paradox
Billiards table

series 04: strings
October 23, 2018 22:00

Title Class progress Status
ISBN
Piece of cake
Torn numbers
The Ghent University prime number
Suskewiet
Bible codes

series 05: functions
October 30, 2018 22:00

Title Class progress Status
ISBN
Table talk
Stop codons
Reversals
Pangrammatic window
Rövarspråket

series 06: lists and tuples
November 20, 2018 22:00

Title Class progress Status
ISBN
Lineup
Recoupling
Doomsday clock
Columnar transposition
Queens, knights and pawns

series 07: more about functions and modules
November 27, 2018 22:00

Title Class progress Status
ISBN
The last marble
Obscure holidays
Dawkins' weasel
Curling
Five up

series 08: sets and dictionaries
December 04, 2018 22:00

Title Class progress Status
ISBN
Caucasus
Calculator spelling
Snowball numbers
Merry christmas
Smoke signals

series 10: object-oriented programming
December 21, 2018 22:00

Title Class progress Status
ISBN
National Register Number
The Hippocrates code
Mad Libs
Blindsided
Quipu
Title Class progress Status
Babbage's number
Numeronym
Title Class progress Status
Turn, turn, turn
Palindrome in Scrabble
Title Class progress Status
HIV 11/25
Garland words
Title Class progress Status
The language of science
Jupiter-C
Title Class progress Status
Mind-boggling card trick
Boxing Day
Title Class progress Status
Lipogram
Burnt pancakes
Title Class progress Status
Pillow talk
Geohash
Patience is a virtue
Title Class progress Status
Timeless
LetterWise
Red is the new black
Title Class progress Status
Dobble
The Parsons code
Audition
Title Class progress Status
Ellison words
Fuse
Knockout
Title Class progress Status
Brush strokes
Wandering fingers
Beaufort