[ ^ CSE 341, Winter 2004 home page ]
Micro-Homework 2
Due: Wed 14 Jan 2004
- Visit the course home page and find Keunwoo's
anonymous feedback form. Send at least one
piece of feedback about lectures. You may write whatever you
want; for example, you might answer some of the following
questions:
- Is the pace of lecture too slow? Too fast?
- Should Keunwoo discuss more concrete examples, e.g. of
data types? Should Keunwoo draw on the board more instead of
writing code, or is the current style of presentation OK?
- Rate how well you feel you grasp the material so far, on a
scale of 1 (worst) to 5 (best). Why?
- Would you like us to assign some "suggested exercises"
after every lecture, to help you determine whether you
understand the material?
- Whatever else you want to say about class so far.
- Visit the course
wiki and do the following:
- Click the "Log in" link at the upper right and create an
account for yourself.
- Click on your username (at the top right). Edit your user
page to tell other CSE341 students something (anything) about
yourself.
- Edit at least one other page in the wiki (the "Help" link
may be useful). We don't care particularly what you do; one
student has already written "I want to have some pizza", which
is fine. However, you may get more value out of asking a
question in the ML
discussion or Emacs
discussion pages, or posting a useful link for other
students.
- Follow Sandra's section
instructions for running SML/NJ inside Emacs. Experiment
with SML/NJ: write at least five "interesting" expressions (more
than one line and one type of data), using some of the
constructs we've discussed in class. Save your .sml file and a
transcript of your *sml* buffer.
- Send Sandra an email with the subject
[cse341-microhw-2]
and the
following contents:
- Your CSE341 wiki username, and a description of what you
did on the wiki
- Attachments of the .sml source file and *sml* buffer
transcript from your Emacs session.