Exams
Dates:
- Midterm: Monday, May 8, 3:30-4:30
- Final: Thursday, June 8, 2:30-4:20
Contact Jonathan Sanders if you need to make other arrangements
(
jsanders@cs.washington.edu).
After the Final:
- average was 57.9, median was 68
- final key
- final exams can be picked up from the reception area on the
first floor of the Paul G. Allen Center. Be sure that you have
valid photo ID with you and that you are prepared with your
course number and quiz section. Exam pick up on behalf of
someone else is not allowed.
- regrade policy with testing programs for
problems 5, 8, and 9.
Exam Rules and Information:
-
You will have an assigned seat and you must sit in that seat. If you
arrive for the exam and find someone else in your seat, ask them to move
because we will move students to their assigned seats. We will take
pictures of the room to help us verify that students sit in their
assigned seats (please contact us if you have a concern about this).
Students are expected to make a reasonable effort to sit in their
assigned seat. Students who demonstrate an egregious disregard for the
seating assignments will receive a 5-point penalty (e.g., if a student
goes to the wrong room or refuses to move when asked to).
-
We may ask to check your UW ID card during the exam so please have it
ready.
-
You will have 60 minutes to complete the midterm and 110 minutes to
complete the final. We will distribute the exam early and you can read
and fill out the cover page of the exam, but you should not look at the
exam questions until you are told to begin. At the end when time is
called, you are required to stop writing and close your exam. Students
who look at the exam before being told to begin and students who make
changes to their exam after time is called will receive a 10-point
penalty. Students who do not close their exam booklet when time is
called may also receive a 10-point penalty.
-
The exams are closed-book and closed-note. You must work alone and may
not use any computing devices of any kind including calculators or
digital copies of the textbook. Cell phones, music players, and other
electronic devices may NOT be out during the exam for any reason.
-
There will be a cheat sheet included as the last page of the exam. Space
will be provided for your answers. If you need additional scratch paper,
raise your hand and a TA will give it to you. You are not allowed to use
your own paper during the exam.
-
Unless a question specifically mentions otherwise, the code you write
will be graded purely on external correctness (proper behavior and
output) and not on internal correctness (style). So, for example,
redundancy or lack of comments will not reduce your score. You are,
however, required to declare all data fields as private, to use generics
properly, and to declare variables and parameters using interfaces when
possible. The midterm cheat sheet mentions important restrictions on
stacks and queues that you must follow.
-
Unless otherwise specified, you should write each solution as a public
instance method. You may define helper methods as part of your solution,
but they should be declared to be private.
-
You are allowed to abbreviate "compiler error" and "runtime error" for
the inheritance question on the midterm (as in "ce" and "re" or "c.e."
and "r.e."), but you should otherwise NOT use any abbreviations on the
exam.
-
You don't need to write any
import
statements in your exam
code.
-
You are not allowed to use advanced material to solve exam problems. In
general, you are restricted to the classes and methods listed on the exam
cheat sheet.
-
You are not allowed to use break, continue, a return from a void method,
try/catch, or Java 8 features.
-
For standard Java classes such as Math and String, you are limited to the
methods listed on the cheat sheet. You are not allowed to use the Arrays
or Collections classes or other standard classes and methods that aren't
included on the cheat sheet.
-
Please be sure that your answer is clearly indicated. This is
particularly important if you provide more than one answer or if you have
notes in addition to your answer. You can draw a box around the answer
you want to have graded and you can draw an "X" through anything that you
do not want to have graded.
-
You do not need to turn in scratch paper unless you have all or part of
an answer on that sheet of paper (you can take the other sheets of paper
with you). If you have a sheet of paper with all or part of an answer,
please write your name on that sheet of paper, staple the entire sheet to
the end of your test (not in the middle) with a single staple in the
upper-left corner, and clearly indicate under the corresponding problem
that your answer is attached on an extra sheet of paper. A stapler will
be available.
-
Please be quiet during the exam. If you have a question or need
assistance, please raise your hand.
-
When you have finished the exam, please turn in your exam quietly and
leave the room.
Final Content:
The final will have the following structure (although the problems might be
reordered to facilitate copying):
Question |
Description |
Points |
1 |
Binary Tree Traversal |
6 |
2 |
Binary Search Tree |
4 |
3 |
Collections Mystery |
5 |
4 |
Collections Programming |
5 |
5 |
Binary Trees |
10 |
6 |
Collections Programming |
10 |
7 |
Comparable class |
20 |
8 |
Binary Trees |
20 |
9 |
Linked Lists |
20 |
After the Midterm:
- average was 66.8, median was 70
- midterm key
- regrade policy with testing programs for
problems 2, 4, 5, and 6.
- regrade requests due by Wednesday, May 24.
Midterm Content
The midterm will have the following structure (although the problems might be
reordered to facilitate copying):
Question |
Description |
Points |
1 |
Recursive Tracing |
15 |
2 |
Recursive Programming |
15 |
3 |
Details of Inheritance |
20 |
4 |
Linked List Nodes |
15 |
5 |
Array Programming |
10 |
6 |
Stacks/Queues |
25 |
Total |
  |
100 |