CSI 4144: Competitive Learning, Fall 2020
Overview
This course is a topics course in problem solving and algorithms. It is modeled on the collaborative and competitive environments at the International Collegiate Programming Contest (ICPC). Each week we will discuss a topic, and the assignments will be programming-based problems related to that topic.
Practical information
Lectures are Online (on Zoom)!.
My office location and office hours are listed on my home page. I am glad to talk to students during and outside of office hours. If you can't come to my office hour, please make an appointment for another time, or just stop by.
You will submit your solutions to Baylor's Kattis Judge. You may need to create an account, and will then register for the course.
Schedule
The schedule of assignments will be on Kattis.
Students who are writing problems (2nd/3rd semester) should keep these dates in mind:
- Problem ideas are due in the second week.
- Complete drafts are due in the 10th week. These should be complete, not just writeups.
- Final, polished drafts are due in the last week of class.
Textbooks & resources
The textbook for this course is Competitive Programming by Steven Halim and Felix Halim (Edition 1 is free online, editions 2 and 3 are inexpensive).These language references are essential:
The following books may also be useful:
- Programming Challenges by Steven Skiena
- The Algorithm Design Manual by Steven Skiena
- Introduction to Algorithms by Cormen et al.
- Programming Pearls by Jon Bentley
- Thinking in C++ (2nd edition) by Bruce Eckel
- Any other data structures, algorithms, and language reference books.
Online programming contest software:
- Open Kattis -- this is the software used to judge many ICPC contests, including the world finals.
Course handouts
- C++ STL cheatsheet 1: vectors, pairs, iterators, algorithms
- C++ STL cheatsheet 2: sets, maps, stringstreams
Grading
Grades will be assigned based on the following breakdown:
- First semester students:
- # of problems completed: 100%
- Second and third semester students:
- # of problems completed: 80%
- problem(s) developed: 20%
Final letter grades will be assigned at the discretion of the instructor, but
here is a minimum guideline for letter grades:
A: 90-100, B+: 88-89, B: 80-87, C+: 78-79, C: 70-77, D: 60-69, F: 0-59
Solving problems
Each problem completed within 1 week of it being assigned earns 2 points. Each problem not completed within a week but completed by the end of the problem session earns 1 point. Completing a program means passing the (hidden) tests on the judge.
For weeks designated as "exams" or "contests", we will work together to find an in-class examination time that works for everyone.
Writing problems
Students taking the course for the second (third) semester must develop one (two) problems of their own. Use the Kattis problem package and fill in the relevant parts. In particular, your writeup should have:
- A Latex writeup.
- At least one correct, efficient, well-structured, well-commented, one-file solution in C++ or Java.
- Possibly other submissions that highlight incorrect solutions (wrong answer, too much time, etc.)
- Files containing sample and secret inputs (each having suffix ".in"). The size of all inputs combined should be less than 500 Kb.
- Files containing sample and secret outputs (each having suffix ".ans"). The size of all inputs combined should be less than 500 Kb.
- An input format validator. It should use exit code 42 when the input file is correctly formatted, another exit code when there is a problem.
- A test case generator which generates input file (may be written in C++, Java, Perl, or Python). This should probably have some hand-made test cases hard coded in, as well as some randomly created test cases.
- An appropriately filled-in problem.yaml file.
The reason we use Kattis problem package format is due to the set of tools that are available for verifying problem integrity. You can use them in different ways:
- Download a docker image -- via a command like:
docker pull problemtools/icpc
The docker image is based on Ubuntu and has problemtools already installed. To use it, run something like this:docker run --rm -v path_to_problem:/problem problemtools/icpc verifyproblem /problem;
wherepath_to_problem
is the directory containing the problem you wish to verify. It is useful to put this into a script that takes an argument forpath_to_problem
. - Install problemtools from Github: Kattis
problemtools project. See the instructions on that page. They are easiest to install on Ubuntu. As the
problemtools package uses a Git submodule, to get the full source you need to
use the following command to get all the sources you'll need:
git clone --recursive git@github.com:Kattis/problemtools.git
You can use this software to verify your problem package before submitting it to me. This means running "verifyproblem" to verify the entire problem package. You can also use "problem2pdf" to see how your problem writeup looks when rendered in PDF.
There are multiple deadlines for problem writeups, which are listed on the schedule above:
- The first deadline is a 1-2 paragraph description of the problem idea(s), including the motivation, type of problem (search, shortest path, dynamic programming, etc.), and the basic story outline for the problem.
- The second deadline ("Complete draft") means all parts of the problem package(s) should be written -- solution, writeup, input verifier, problem data, etc. The package should verify with Kattis problemtools "verifyproblem". I will evaluate these and send feedback for the final version.
- The deliverable of the final deadline is the same as that of the complete draft, except it should be highly polished and in final form. Even with a complete draft that is in good shape, getting a well-crafted problem can be a lot of work, so don't put off working on this.
Here are some additional thoughts and guidelines on how to write programming contest problems.
Policies
- This website contains the official course information. Please check it regularly for updates.
- All work in this course is strictly individual, unless the instructor explicitly states otherwise. While discussion of course material is encouraged, collaboration on assignments is not allowed. Collaboration includes (but is not limited to) discussing with anyone (other than the professor) anything that is specific to completing an assignment. You are encouraged to discuss the course material with the professor, preferably in office hours, and also by email.
- Bring any grading correction requests to your professor's attention within 2 weeks of receiving the grade or before the end of the semester, whichever comes first.
Academic honesty
I take academic honesty very seriously. Many studies, including one by Sheilah Maramark and Mindi Barth Maline have suggested that "some students cheat because of ignorance, uncertainty, or confusion regarding what behaviors constitute dishonesty" (Maramark and Maline, Issues in Education: Academic Dishonesty Among College Students, U.S. Department of Education, Office of Research, August 1993, page 5). In an effort to reduce misunderstandings, here is a minimal list of activities that will be considered cheating in this class:
- Using a source other than the optional course textbooks, the course website, or your professor to obtain credit for any assignment.
- Copying another student's work. Simply looking over someone else's source code is copying.
- Providing your work for another student to copy.
- Collaboration on any assignment, unless the work is explicitly given as collaborative work. Any discussion of an assignment or project is considered collaboration.
- Plagiarism.
- Studying tests or using assignments from previous semesters.
- Providing someone with tests or assignments from previous semesters.
- Turning in someone else's work as your own work.
- Giving test questions to students in another class.
- Reviewing previous copies of the instructor's tests without permission from the instructor.
Title IX Office
Baylor University does not discriminate on the basis of sex or gender in any of its education or employment programs and activities, and it does not tolerate discrimination or harassment on the basis of sex or gender. This policy prohibits sexual and gender-based harassment, sexual assault, sexual exploitation, stalking, intimate partner violence, and retaliation (collectively referred to as prohibited conduct). For more information on how to report, or to learn more about our policy and process, please visit www.baylor.edu/titleix. You may also contact the Title IX office directly by phone, (254) 710-8454, or email, TitleIX_Coordinator@baylor.edu.
Copyright © Greg Hamerly, with some content
taken from a syllabus by Jeff Donahoo.
Computer Science Department
Baylor University