Intensive Course C++

The course is full! Further registrations will be put on a wait list and given a place when someone decides to drop the course. (Limited number of participants! Please register by email to cplusplus@ini.rub.de, stating your name, student ID number, study program (Studiengang), and semester.)
The block course provides a short but extensive introduction to the programming language C++. It is aimed at students that have a solid knowledge of Java or another imperative programming language. C++ is used in many research groups in the "Institut für Neuroinformatik" (Institute for Neural Computation) and is required for the exercises in "Artificial Neural Networks" and "Vision in Man and Machine".

- Basic concept (C/C++): control structures, type system, operations, implicit/explicit casts, functions, declarations/definitions, preprocessor, pointer and arrays, internal/external bindings, compiler-linker-concept, memory management

- Classes in C++: references, const-qualifier, default-parameter, encapsulation, abstraction, polymorphy, constructor/destructor, overloaded functions, copy-constructor, assignment operator, inheritance, virtual functions, abstract classes/interfaces, static/dynamic binding, static elements/methods

- Templates: template functions, template methods, template classes, inline, explicit inline, specialization, meta programming

- Standard Template Library (STL): cout, cin, string, fstream, vector, list, queue

- Parallelization in C++ 11

Lecturers

Details

Course type
Lab courses
Credits
4 CP
Term
Winter Term 2015/2016

Dates

Lab course
Takes place every day from 10:00 to 18:00 in room CIP (ID 03/139).
First appointment is on 15.02.2016
Last appointment is on 26.02.2016

Requirements

It is assumed that participants are already familiar with an imperative, possibly object oriented programming language, e.g., Java. This course is not suited for programming beginners.

The Institut für Neuroinformatik (INI) is a research unit of the Faculty of Computer Science at the Ruhr-Universität Bochum. Its scientific goal is to understand the fundamental principles through which organisms generate behavior and cognition while linked to their environments through sensory and effector systems. Inspired by our insights into such natural cognitive systems, we seek new solutions to problems of information processing in artificial cognitive systems. We draw from a variety of disciplines that include experimental psychology and neurophysiology as well as machine learning, neural artificial intelligence, computer vision, and robotics.

Universitätsstr. 150, Building NB, Room 3/32
D-44801 Bochum, Germany

Tel: (+49) 234 32-28967
Fax: (+49) 234 32-14210