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Computational Models

Code: CC1004     Acronym: CC1004     Level: 100

Keywords
Classification Keyword
OFICIAL Computer Science

Instance: 2016/2017 - 2S Ícone do Moodle

Active? Yes
Web Page: http://www.dcc.fc.up.pt/~apt/aulas/MC/1617
Responsible unit: Department of Computer Science
Course/CS Responsible: Bachelor in Computer Science

Cycles of Study/Courses

Acronym No. of Students Study Plan Curricular Years Credits UCN Credits ECTS Contact hours Total Time
L:B 1 Official Study Plan 3 - 6 56 162
L:CC 94 Plano de estudos a partir de 2014 1 - 6 56 162
L:M 6 Official Study Plan 2 - 6 56 162
3
L:Q 0 study plan from 2016/17 3 - 6 56 162
MI:ERS 146 Plano Oficial desde ano letivo 2014 1 - 6 56 162

Teaching language

Portuguese

Objectives

Teach fundamental concepts and results about three computational models (finite automata, pushdown automata, Turing machines) and the related classes of formal languages, with emphasis on regular and context free languages.

Learning outcomes and competences

Students are expected to be able to describe simple formal languages using different models of computation and classify them in the Chomsky hierarchy.

Working method

Presencial

Program

Notion of formal language. Deterministic finite automata and non-deterministic finite automata. Regular expressions and finite automata. Properties of regular languages. Minimization of finite automata. Pumping lemma for regular languages. Context-free grammars and languages. Derivation trees. Ambiguity. Simplification of context-free grammars and normal forms. Push-down automata. Properties of context-free languages. Pumping lemma for context-free grammars. Turing machines and notion of computability.

Mandatory literature

Ana Paula Tomás; Introdução às Linguagens Formais e Modelos de Computação, DCC-FCUP, 2014
John E. Hopcroft, Rajeev Motwani, Jeffrey D. Ullman; Introduction to Automata Theory, Languages, and Computation, Addison-Wesley, 2006. ISBN: 0-321-47617-4
Dexter C. Kozen; Automata and Computability, Sringer, 1997. ISBN: ISBN 0-387-94907-0
Mark V. Lawson; Finite Automata, Chapman & Hall/CRC, 2004. ISBN: 1-58488-255-7

Teaching methods and learning activities

Lectures: exposition of  the syllabus topics and examples.
Practical Lectures: exercise solving and discussion.

Evaluation Type

Distributed evaluation with final exam

Assessment Components

designation Weight (%)
Exame 100,00
Participação presencial 0,00
Teste 0,00
Total: 100,00

Eligibility for exams

Students must attend at least 75% of the pratical classes to be admitted to the exams.

Calculation formula of final grade

If it fits in with the academic calendar for 2016/2017, there will be two optional tests during the semester (TE1, TE2).  To attend TE2, it is required a minimum grade of 8.0/20.0 in TE1.  The second test covers all topics.  A minimum grade of 8.0/20.0 is required also.

The final grade is given by

      max(0.4*TE1+0.6*TE2, TE2, FinalExam)

Students do not need to take the final exam if max(0.4*TE1+0.6*TE2, TE2) >= 9.5.

Classification improvement

Final exam.
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