Computer Science II
Computer Science II
Spring 2003, Wednesday, 2/5/03
Name _____________________________
Explain or give the UNIX or vi commands or keystrokes to do the following tasks.
[27 pts]
1. Display filenames and all their details found in your current directory that have the .java extension. _______________________[2]
2. Display only filenames (including the special ones starting with a period) found in /academic/cs2 ________________________ [2]
3. Create a subdirectory called myclasses. ___________________________[2]
4. Copy all .class files in your current directory to this new subdirectory myclasses ____________________________________ [2]
5. Delete all files with extension .class in your current directory. ____________________________[2]
6. Change your current working directory to the new classes subdirectory ________________________[2]
7. Display the contents of the file test.java one screen at a time ______________________[2]
8. Begin capturing the screen display to a file for printing later ____________________ [1]
9. Print the file typescript to the local, default printer using the enscript formatter ____________________________[2]
10. Start the visual editor on file test.java ______________________[2]
11. What keystroke terminates a program in Unix?____
What keystroke designates end of input in Unix?____
What character designates the current directory? _____ [3]
12. Which file contains commands for initializing your c-shell? _________________________ [2]
13. Run the non-Java program prog using the file data for input and pipe the output stream through more. __________________________________________________[3]
14. Explain the action executed for each of these vi commands
[8 pts]
i ________________________________________
ESC (key)________________________________________
10k________________________________________
dd________________________________________
u__________________________________________
. (period) ___________________________________________
ZZ _____________________________________________
:q! ____________________________________________
15. Collections.
[5 pts]
a. Connect the four elements below into a purely linear collection with arrows starting at element A and ending at element D [3].
b. Connect the four elements below into a hierarchical structure with the root (start) as B with C as an intermediate node. [2]
16. Abstract Data Types. (True/False)
[5 pts]
a. ____ The ArrayList is an example of a dynamic structure.
b. ____ The ArrayList is designed to hold only primitive data types.
c. ____ All ADTs implemented as classes ultimately inherit from the Object class.
d. ____ The abstract class can be used to define methods and instance variables inheritable by related classes.
e. ____ An abstract class cannot define the body of any of its methods.
17. Object-oriented programming design principles.
[10 pts]
a. Define the Information Hiding Principle from the perspective of the user [3].
b. How do pre conditions and post conditions support the separation of activities between the user and implementer of a module? [4]
c. Define black-box testing [3].
18. Miscellaneous Java concepts (True/False)
[10 pts]
a. _____ Each Java class should be defined in its own separate file with the extension .java and that file name must match the class name.
b _____ The contents of the .class file are called bytecodes, which are platform independent.
c. _____ Garbage collection is automatically invoked by the Java Virtual Machine to recover memory from the unreferenced objects.
d. _____ The toString function that can be defined for each class is an example of a transformer or mutator.
e. _____ An iterator ensures that each element of a collection can eventually be accessed.
f. _____ A class that is inherited from an existing class is the superclass.
g. _____A record structure is one usually composed of private instance variables and public methods.
h. _____The Exception class is the exception of not being a subclass of Object.
i. _____ Two strings can be compared with < and >.
j. _____ Object variables are really pointers or references to objects stored in the heap space.
19. Number the steps of the software development cycle (Waterfall method) from 1 to 6 in correct order.
[5 pts]
_____ Integration _____ Maintenance
_____ Design _____ User request
_____ Analysis _____ Implementation
20. We have discussed the differences between an UnsortedStringList and SortedStringList. For each of the abstract operations below, assuming a list size of 100, approximate the average number of copy or compare operations a program would have to carry out to accomplish the operation for the different type of StringLists.
[10 pts]
|Abstract operation (basic operation to be |For UnsortedStringLists |For SortedStringLists |
|approximated) | | |
|Insert a new element (copy) | | |
|Delete an element (copy) | | |
|Return the length of the list (compare, but be | | |
|careful here) | | |
|Find an existing element (compare) | | |
|getNextItem (compare) | | |
21. Below is a segment of code similar from class and your project. Assume classes Date is a class that holds the day, month and year along with a String name. IncDate inherits from Date and adds the increment method that advances the day by one. In both cases the toString() function prints the date in mo/day/yr format.
[20 pts]
0 try {
1 Date [] events;
2 events = new Date[10];
3 events[0] = new Date (1,13,2003, “Classes start”);
4 events[1] = new Date (2,2,2003, “Groundhog Day”);
5
6 IncDate today = new IncDate(2,5,2003,”CS 240 Exam 1”);
7 IncDate tomorrow = new IncDate(2,5,2003,”Work on Program 3”);
8 tomorrow.increment();
9 events[2] = today;
10 events[3] = tomorrow;
11 events[4] = new IncDate (4,30,2003,”Reading Day”);
12 } catch (Exception e) {
13 System.out.println(“Error in initialization: “+e.getMessage());
14 }
15 for(i=0; i ................
................
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