University of Nevada Las Vegas
Howard R. Hughes
College of Engineering
Department of Computer Science
My Home Page
Computer Science 477/677
Analysis of Algorithms
Fall 2021
Course Page and Syllabus
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Instructor:
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Dr. Larmore
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Office, TBE B378B.
Telephone ☎ 702-895-1096.
Email: lawrence "dot" larmore "at" unlv "dot" edu
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Office Hours:
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Office hours will be by Zoom only this semester.
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Contacting Me:
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You may telephone my office. Please do not leave a telephone message.
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It's best to send me email.
Be sure to write "CS477" in the subject field
so that I know what the message is about. (I delete lots of messages
without reading them, based on the subject fields.)
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Please, never
try to communicate with me by leaving notes on my door, under my door,
or in my mailbox in the department office, as
those notes get lost, and I can't retrieve them remotely.
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If it is necessary to give me something, please leave it with the department
staff, and then send me an email message saying
that the item has been left for me.
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Grader:
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Nicholas Heerdt
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Email: heerdt "at" unlv "dot" edu
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Days of Instruction:
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August 23, 2021 - December 1, 2021.
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Time of Instruction:
- 8:30 - 9:45,
Monday and Wednesday.
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Place of Instruction:
- TBE-B 174.
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Labor Day Recess:
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September 6
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Textbook:
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Algorithms, by Sanjay Dasgupta, Christos Papadimitriou, and Umesh Vazirani
Change from Last Semester
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CS 302 (Data Structures)
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MAT 351 (Discrete Mathematics II).
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Click
here if you did not take both
CSC 302 and MAT 351 at UNLV and receive a grade of "C" or better in
each of those two courses.
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Graduate Students:
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If you want graduate credit, you must enroll in 677, not 477.
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Each CSC 656 student must turn in at least one
challenge problem and turn it in by the last week of class.
CS 477 students are also permitted to work challenge problems, but
I will not permit students to improve a poor grade in this manner.
The reason for this policy is that I want students who are doing poorly
in the course to devote their energy to mastering the regular material.
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Written Homework:
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will be assigned, collected,
and graded. You are permitted to discuss homework.
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Examinations:
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First Examination: Monday, September 20.
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Second Examination: Monday, October 18.
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Third Examination: Monday, November 15.
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Final Examination: 8:00 - 10:00 Wednesday December 8
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Grading:
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Your grade will be based on:
- Three mid-term examinations. 60%
- Homework. 20%
- Final examination. 30%
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Although the homework will take a substantial amount of time to work,
and will actually be harder than the examinations,
it counts for a smaller part of the grade. The reason for this is
that I allow you to work together on homework. If you work the homework
regularly, you should do well on the examinations.
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Topics:
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Modular arithmetic and RSA encryption
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Sorting
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Divide and Conquer
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Dynamic programming
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Trees, graphs
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Depth first search
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Breadth first search
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Kruskal's algorithms
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Union/Find
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Algorithm analysis
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Recurrence relations: master theorem
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Loop Invariants
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Shortest path problem, including Dijksta's algorithm and
the A* algorithm
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NP-completeness