- CS-A1110
- Supplementary Pages
- Lectures
Luet oppimateriaalin englanninkielistä versiota. Mainitsit kuitenkin taustakyselyssä osaavasi suomea. Siksi suosittelemme, että käytät suomenkielistä versiota, joka on testatumpi ja hieman laajempi ja muutenkin mukava.
Suomenkielinen materiaali kyllä esittelee englanninkielisetkin termit.
Kieli vaihtuu A+:n sivujen yläreunan painikkeesta. Tai tästä: Vaihda suomeksi.
Lectures
The Fall 2024 incarnation of Programming 1 has two lecture-like things. One is an introduction to the course, and the other is an end-of-course event. See below for the details.
This course, Programming 1, is not a lecture course. Listening to lectures is not the way you’re going to learn to program.
All you need to do to get started is go to Chapter 1.1 of the course ebook and start studying. The ebook explains how the course works; it will also tell you which programming tools to install and guide you as you start practicing.
That being said, the Fall 2024 incarnation of Programming 1 does have two lecture-like things that take place on campus. These are meant for local Aalto students. Neither lecture is mandatory or essential.
Date |
Time |
Location |
Description |
Materials |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mon Sep 2nd, 2024 |
16–18 |
Hall TU2, TUAS building, Maarintie 8, Espoo (NOTE: If you know Finnish, come instead to Hall A in the Undergraduate Center, Otakaari 1; same time.) |
An introduction to the course and some first-week topics. |
|
Mon Dec 9th, 2024 |
14–16 |
Hall C, Undergraduate Center, Otakaari 1, Espoo |
An end-of-course event. We’ll take a look at what you the students have achieved, reflect on what has been learned and what hasn’t, and point up some follow-on courses. |
Materials will be published as Chapter 13.0. |
Feedback
Credits
Thousands of students have given feedback and so contributed to this ebook’s design. Thank you!
The ebook’s chapters, programming assignments, and weekly bulletins have been written in Finnish and translated into English by Juha Sorva.
The appendices (glossary, Scala reference, FAQ, etc.) are by Juha Sorva unless otherwise specified on the page.
The automatic assessment of the assignments has been developed by: (in alphabetical order) Riku Autio, Nikolas Drosdek, Kaisa Ek, Joonatan Honkamaa, Antti Immonen, Jaakko Kantojärvi, Onni Komulainen, Niklas Kröger, Kalle Laitinen, Teemu Lehtinen, Mikael Lenander, Ilona Ma, Jaakko Nakaza, Strasdosky Otewa, Timi Seppälä, Teemu Sirkiä, Joel Toppinen, Anna Valldeoriola Cardó, and Aleksi Vartiainen.
The illustrations at the top of each chapter, and the similar drawings elsewhere in the ebook, are the work of Christina Lassheikki.
The animations that detail the execution Scala programs have been designed by Juha Sorva and Teemu Sirkiä. Teemu Sirkiä and Riku Autio did the technical implementation, relying on Teemu’s Jsvee and Kelmu toolkits.
The other diagrams and interactive presentations in the ebook are by Juha Sorva.
The O1Library software has been developed by Aleksi Lukkarinen, Juha Sorva, and Jaakko Nakaza. Several of its key components are built upon Aleksi’s SMCL library.
The pedagogy of using O1Library for simple graphical programming (such as Pic
) is
inspired by the textbooks How to Design Programs by Flatt, Felleisen, Findler, and
Krishnamurthi and Picturing Programs by Stephen Bloch.
The course platform A+ was originally created at Aalto’s LeTech research group as a student project. The open-source project is now shepherded by the Computer Science department’s edu-tech team and hosted by the department’s IT services; dozens of Aalto students and others have also contributed.
The A+ Courses plugin, which supports A+ and O1 in IntelliJ IDEA, is another open-source project. It has been designed and implemented by various students in collaboration with O1’s teachers.
For O1’s current teaching staff, please see Chapter 1.1.
Additional credits appear at the ends of some chapters.