• Offered by Research School of Computer Science
  • ANU College ANU College of Engineering and Computer Science
  • Course subject Computer Science
  • Areas of interest Software Engineering
  • Academic career UGRD
  • Course convener
    • Dr Shayne Flint
  • Mode of delivery In Person
  • Offered in First Semester 2014
    See Future Offerings

This course is about the implementation and test phases of the software construction process. It is based around creating individual practical assignments on the small scale, and modifying a medium scale project in two major assignments over the whole semester. In this project, students work on a substantial application, relevant to their experience as computer users. The project is closely specified and designed around a strong architectural structure as an exemplar, and may involve a graphical user interface. During the semester students learn to improve their own software development practices by following the Personal Software Process, learning time-management, planning, and quality control. The course also studies aspects of the principles and practices of software engineering.

The following topics are covered: working with software larger systems; code review and inspections; test planning and unit testing (derived from specification and design documents); object-oriented (Java), and scripting (Bash) languages; recursive data structures; graphical user interfaces; the Personal Software Process; build tools (Make and Ant) and version control (Subversion); use of external code libraries.

Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion, students will have the knowledge and skills to:

On completing this course students are expected to be able to:

  1. Construct and modify small to medium scale computer programs
    1. apply all aspects of software construction for a representative variety of small to medium scale object-oriented programs up to around 300 lines of code containing up to 7 classes;
    2. make modifications (including source code design, implementation, and testing) within a moderate-sized Java program system (1000 - 10000 lines of code), given a documented specification, design and implementation of the system
    3. have elementary or better competence with standard software development tools and methods: text editor, compiler, integrated software development environment, command line scripting, automated build tools, version control, unit test design, code review
    4. use and analyse a personal software process in constructing small computer programs
  2. Compare several forms of abstraction in object-oriented software design and construction: inheritance, generic types, polymorphism, procedural abstraction, abstract recursive data structures (including abstract syntax trees); and to apply them appropriately in constructing programs.
  3.  Use common programming knowledge resources to find, understand, and apply online manuals and tutorials for software tools, programming language components, and software libraries
  4. Describe the underlying principles of three major aspects of software construction and to apply the appropriate tools:
    • version control (using the Subversion tool)
    • unit testing (using the JUnit tool)
    • automatic build process (using the Make or Ant tool)

Indicative Assessment

Lecture preparation (12%); Weekly practice + presentation (48%); Final Exam (practical 20%, theory 20%)


The ANU uses Turnitin to enhance student citation and referencing techniques, and to assess assignment submissions as a component of the University's approach to managing Academic Integrity. While the use of Turnitin is not mandatory, the ANU highly recommends Turnitin is used by both teaching staff and students. For additional information regarding Turnitin please visit the ANU Online website.

Workload

Thirty one-hour lectures, five two-hour tutorial/laboratory sessions and three one to two-hour seminars

Requisite and Incompatibility

Studying Bachelor of Software Engineering 4708 or Bachelor of Software Engineering/Science 4711 or Bachelor of Software Engineering/Commerce 4712, completed COMP1510 or COMP1110; and 6 units of 1000 level MATH. Incompatible with COMP2100.

Prescribed Texts

There is no required textbook for COMP2100. Useful reference books are:

Tremblay, Jean-Paul & Cheston, Grant A. Data Structures and Software Development in an Object-Oriented Domain, Java edition, Prentice-Hall, 2003.

Humphrey, Watts Introduction to the Personal Software Process, Addison Wesley, 1997.

Hunt, Andrew & Thomas, david The Pragmatic Programmer , Addison Wesley, 2000.

McConnell, Steve Code Complete , Microsoft Press, 1993.

Assumed Knowledge

Introductory programming, preferably in an object-oriented language

Fees

Tuition fees are for the academic year indicated at the top of the page.  

If you are a domestic graduate coursework or international student you will be required to pay tuition fees. Students continuing in their current program of study will have their tuition fees indexed annually from the year in which you commenced your program. Further information for domestic and international students about tuition and other fees can be found at Fees.

Student Contribution Band:
2
Unit value:
6 units

If you are an undergraduate student and have been offered a Commonwealth supported place, your fees are set by the Australian Government for each course. At ANU 1 EFTSL is 48 units (normally 8 x 6-unit courses). You can find your student contribution amount for each course at Fees.  Where there is a unit range displayed for this course, not all unit options below may be available.

Units EFTSL
6.00 0.12500
Domestic fee paying students
Year Fee Description
1994-2003 $1650
2014 $2952
2013 $2946
2012 $2946
2011 $2946
2010 $2916
2009 $2850
2008 $2592
2007 $2298
2006 $2190
2005 $2190
2004 $2190
International fee paying students
Year Fee
1994-2003 $3234
2014 $3762
2013 $3756
2012 $3756
2011 $3756
2010 $3750
2009 $3426
2008 $3426
2007 $3426
2006 $3426
2005 $3288
2004 $3234
Note: Please note that fee information is for current year only.

Offerings, Dates and Class Summary Links

ANU utilises MyTimetable to enable students to view the timetable for their enrolled courses, browse, then self-allocate to small teaching activities / tutorials so they can better plan their time. Find out more on the Timetable webpage.

The list of offerings for future years is indicative only.
Class summaries, if available, can be accessed by clicking on the View link for the relevant class number.

First Semester

Class number Class start date Last day to enrol Census date Class end date Mode Of Delivery Class Summary
2916 17 Feb 2014 07 Mar 2014 31 Mar 2014 30 May 2014 In Person N/A

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