Cse Syllabus 2022
Cse Syllabus 2022
2023
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PCC: Professional Core Course, PCCL: Professional Core Course laboratory, UHV: Universal Human Value Course, MC: Mandatory Course (Non-credit), AEC: Ability
Enhancement Course, SEC: Skill Enhancement Course, L: Lecture, T: Tutorial, P: Practical S= SDA: Skill Development Activity, CIE: Continuous Internal Evaluation, SEE:
Semester End Evaluation.K :This letter in the course code indicates common to all the stream of engineering. ESC: Engineering Science Course, ETC: Emerging
Technology Course, PLC: Programming Language Course
.
Engineering Science Course (ESC/ETC/PLC) (Note- Student should opt for the course which should not be similar to the course opted in 1st Year)
BCS306A Object Oriented Programming with Java
BCS306B Object Oriented Programming with C++
Ability Enhancement Course – III
BCS358A Data analytics with Excel BCS358C Project Management with Git
BCS358B R programming BCS358D Data Visualization with Phyton
Professional Core Course (IPCC): Refers to Professional Core Course Theory Integrated with practicals of the same course. Credit for IPCC can be 04 and its Teaching–
Learning hours (L : T : P) can be considered as (3 : 0 : 2) or (2 : 2 : 2). The theory part of the IPCC shall be evaluated both by CIE and SEE. The practical part shall be
evaluated by only CIE (no SEE). However, questions from the practical part of IPCC shall be included in the SEE question paper. For more details, the regulation
governing the Degree of Bachelor of Engineering /Technology (B.E./B.Tech.) 2022-23 may please be refered.
National Service Scheme /Physical Education/Yoga: All students have to register for any one of the courses namely National Service Scheme (NSS), Physical
Education (PE)(Sports and Athletics), and Yoga(YOG) with the concerned coordinator of the course during the first week of III semesters. Activities shall be carried out
between III semester to the VI semester (for 4 semesters). Successful completion of the registered course and requisite CIE score is mandatory for the award of the
degree. The events shall be appropriately scheduled by the colleges and the same shall be reflected in the calendar prepared for the NSS, PE, and Yoga activities.
These courses shall not be considered for vertical progression as well as for the calculation of SGPA and CGPA, but completion of the course is mandatory for the
award of degree.
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TD : Concerned
If the course is Theory
01
AEC/ Ability Enhancement Course/Skill department 1 0 0
6
SEC
BCS456x PSB: CS
50 50 100 1
Enhancement Course- IV If the course is a lab
02
0 0 2
4 BSC BBOK407 Biology For Computer Science TD / PSB: BT, CHE, 2 0 0 03 50 50 100 2
7 UHV BUHK408 Universal human values course Any Department 1 0 0 01 50 50 100 1
BNSK459 National Service Scheme (NSS) NSS coordinator
Physical Education
9 MC BPEK459 Physical Education (PE) (Sports and Athletics) Director
0 0 2 100 --- 100 0
BYOK459 Yoga Yoga Teacher
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Professional Elective Courses (PEC): A professional elective (PEC) course is intended to enhance the depth and breadth of educational experience in the Engineering
and Technology curriculum. Multidisciplinary courses that are added supplement the latest trend and advanced technology in the selected stream of engineering.
Each group will provide an option to select one course. The minimum number of students’ strengths for offering a professional elective is 10. However, this
conditional shall not be applicable to cases where the admission to the program is less than 10.
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guidance of the Program Coordinator/ Advisor/Mentor. The minimum numbers of students’ strength for offering Open Elective Course is 10. However, this condition
shall not be applicable to class where the admission to the program is less than 10.
Project Phase-I : Students have to discuss with the mentor /guide and with their helphe/she has to complete the literature survey and prepare the report and finally
define the problem statement for the project work.
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Setting department, OEC: Open Elective Course, PEC: Professional Elective Course. PROJ: Project work
Note: VII and VIII semesters of IV years of the program
(1) Institutions can swap the VII and VIII Semester Schemes of Teaching and Examinations to accommodate research internships/ industry internships after the VI
semester.
(2) Credits earned for the courses of VII and VIII Semester Scheme of Teaching and Examinations shall be counted against the corresponding semesters whether the
VII or VIII semesters is completed during the beginning of the IV year or the later part of IV years of the program.
Professional Elective Courses (PEC): A professional elective (PEC) course is intended to enhance the depth and breadth of educational experience in the Engineering
and Technology curriculum. Multidisciplinary courses that are added supplement the latest trend and advanced technology in the selected stream of engineering.
Each group will provide an option to select one course. The minimum number of students’ strengths for offering professional electives is 10. However, this conditional
shall not be applicable to cases where the admission to the program is less than 10.
Open Elective Courses:
Students belonging to a particular stream of Engineering and Technology are not entitled to the open electives offered by their parent Department. However, they can
opt for an elective offered by other Departments, provided they satisfy the prerequisite condition if any. Registration to open electives shall be documented under the
guidance of the Program Coordinator/ Advisor/Mentor. The minimum numbers of students’ strength for offering Open Elective Course is 10. However, this condition
shall not be applicable to class where the admission to the program is less than 10.
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13
in the ratio 50:25:25. The marks awarded for the project report shall be the same for all the batch mates.
(2) Interdisciplinary: Continuous Internal Evaluation shall be group-wise at the college level with the participation of all guides of the college. Participation of external
guide/s, if any, is desirable. The CIE marks awarded for the project work, shall be based on the evaluation of project work Report, project presentation skill, and
question and answer session in the ratio 50:25:25. The marks awarded for the project report shall be the same for all the batch mates.
SEE procedure for Project Work: SEE for project work will be conducted by the two examiners appointed by the University. The SEE marks awarded for the project
work shall be based on the evaluation of project work Report, project presentation skill, and question and answer session in the ratio 50:25:25.
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Swapping Facility
● Institutions can swap VII and VIII Semester Scheme of Teaching and Examinations to accommodate research internships/ industry internships/Rural Internship
after the VI semester.
● Credits earned for the courses of VII and VIII Semester Scheme of Teaching and Examinations shall be counted against the corresponding semesters whether VII or
VIII semester is completed during the beginning of IV year or later part of IV year of the program.
● Note: For BCE801x and BCE802x courses BOS will announce list of courses in 6th , 7th & 8th Sem . Students can register in any of the semester to earn
the credits in 8th Sem.
Elucidation:
At the beginning of IV years of the program i.e., after VI semester, VII semester classwork and VIII semester Research Internship /Industrial Internship / Rural
Internship shall be permitted to be operated simultaneously by the University so that students have ample opportunity for an internship. In other words, a good
percentage of the class shall attend VII semester classwork and a similar percentage of others shall attend to Research Internship or Industrial Internship or Rural
Internship.
Research/Industrial /Rural Internship shall be carried out at an Industry, NGO, MSME, Innovation center, Incubation center, Start-up, center of Excellence (CoE), Study
Centre established in the parent institute and /or at reputed research organizations/institutes.
The mandatory Research internship /Industry internship / Rural Internship is for 14 to 20 weeks. The internship shall be considered as a head of passing and shall be
considered for the award of a degree. Those, who do not take up/complete the internship shall be declared to fail and shall have to complete it during the subsequent
University examination after satisfying the internship requirements.
Research internship: A research internship is intended to offer the flavor of current research going on in the research field. It helps students get familiarized with the
field and imparts the skill required for carrying out research.
Industry internship: Is an extended period of work experience undertaken by students to supplement their degree for professional development. It also helps
them learn to overcome unexpected obstacles and successfully navigate organizations, perspectives, and cultures. Dealing with contingencies helps students
recognize, appreciate, and adapt to organizational realities by tempering their knowledge with practical constraints.
Rural Internship: Rural development internship is an initiative of Unnat Bharat Abhiyan Cell, RGIT in association with AICTE to involve students of all departments
studying in different academic years for exploring various opportunities in techno-social fields, to connect and work with Rural India for their upliftment.
The faculty coordinator or mentor has to monitor the student’s internship progress and interact with them to guide for the successful completion of the internship.
The students are permitted to carry out the internship anywhere in India or abroad. University shall not bear any expenses incurred in respect of the internship.
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Annexure-II 1
With the consent of the internal guide and Principal of the Institution, students shall be allowed to carry out the internship at
state or abroad), provided favorable facilities are available for the internship and the student remains regularly in contact with
bear any cost involved in carrying out the internship by students. However, students can receive any financial assistance ext
Professional Elective /Open Elective Course:These are ONLINE courses suggested by the respective Board of Studies. Details of these courses shall be mad
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Annexure-II 2
Course objectives: This course will enable the students to:
1. To introduce the concept of random variables, probability distributions, specific discrete
and continuous distributions with practical application in Computer Science Engineering
and social life situations.
2. To Provide the principles of statistical inferences and the basics of hypothesis testing with
emphasis on some commonly encountered hypotheses.
3. To Determine whether an input has a statistically significant effect on the system's
response through ANOVA testing.
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Annexure-II 3
Joint probability distribution: Joint Probability distribution for two discrete random
variables, expectation, covariance and correlation.
Markov Chain: Introduction to Stochastic Process, Probability Vectors, Stochastic matrices,
Regular stochastic matrices, Markov chains, Higher transition probabilities, Stationary
distribution of Regular Markov chains and absorbing states. (12
Hours)
(RBT Levels: L1, L2 and L3)
Pedagogy Chalk and Board, Problem-based learning
Module-3: Statistical Inference 1
Introduction, sampling distribution, standard error, testing of hypothesis, levels of
significance, test of significances, confidence limits, simple sampling of attributes, test of
significance for large samples, comparison of large samples. (12
Hours)
(RBT Levels: L1, L2 and L3)
Pedagogy Chalk and Board, Problem-based learning
Module-4: Statistical Inference 2
Sampling variables, central limit theorem and confidences limit for unknown mean. Test of
Significance for means of two small samples, students ‘t’ distribution, Chi-square distribution
as a test of goodness of fit. F-Distribution. (12
Hours)
(RBT Levels: L1, L2 and L3)
Pedagogy Chalk and Board, Problem-based learning
Module-5: Design of Experiments & ANOVA
Principles of experimentation in design, Analysis of completely randomized design,
randomized block design. The ANOVA Technique, Basic Principle of ANOVA, One-way ANOVA,
Two-way ANOVA, Latin-square Design, and Analysis of Co-Variance. (12 Hours)
(RBT Levels: L1, L2 and L3)
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Annexure-II 4
● For the Assignment component of the CIE, there are 25 marks and for the Internal Assessment
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Annexure-II 3
● The first test will be administered after 40-50% of the syllabus has been covered, and
the second test will be administered after 85-90% of the syllabus has been covered
● Any two assignment methods mentioned in the 22OB2.4, if an assignment is project-based
then only one assignment for the course shall be planned. The teacher should not conduct
two assignments at the end of the semester if two assignments are planned.
● For the course, CIE marks will be based on a scaled-down sum of two tests and other
methods of assessment.
Internal Assessment Test question paper is designed to attain the different levels of Bloom’s
taxonomy as per the outcome defined for the course.
Semester-End Examination:
Theory SEE will be conducted by the University as per the scheduled timetable, with common question papers
for the course (duration 03 hours).
1. The question paper will have ten questions. Each question is set for 20 marks.
2. There will be 2 questions from each module. Each of the two questions under a module (with
a maximum of 3 sub-questions), should have a mix of topics under that module.
3. The students have to answer 5 full questions, selecting one full question from each
module. Marks scored shall be proportionally reduced to 50 marks
Suggested Learning Resources:
Textbooks:
1. Ronald E. Walpole, Raymond H Myers, Sharon L Myers & Keying Ye “Probability &
Statistics for Engineers & Scientists”, Pearson Education, 9th edition, 2017.
2. Peter Bruce, Andrew Bruce & Peter Gedeck “Practical Statistics for Data
Scientists” O’Reilly Media, Inc., 2nd edition 2020.
Reference Books: (Name of the author/Title of the Book/ Name of the publisher/Edition and
Year)
1. Erwin Kreyszig, “Advanced Engineering Mathematics”, John Wiley & Sons, 9th
Edition, 2006.
2. B. S. Grewal “Higher Engineering Mathematics”, Khanna publishers, 44th Ed., 2021.
3. G Haribaskaran “Probability, Queuing Theory & Reliability Engineering”, Laxmi
Publication, Latest Edition, 2006
4. Irwin Miller & Marylees Miller, John E. Freund’s “Mathematical Statistics with
Applications” Pearson. Dorling Kindersley Pvt. Ltd. India, 8th edition, 2014.
5. S C Gupta and V K Kapoor, “Fundamentals of Mathematical Statistics”, S Chand and
Company, Latest edition.
6. Robert V. Hogg, Joseph W. McKean & Allen T. Craig. “Introduction to
Mathematical Statistics”, Pearson Education 7th edition, 2013.
7. Jim Pitman. Probability, Springer-Verlag, 1993.
8. Sheldon M. Ross, “Introduction to Probability Models” 11th edition. Elsevier, 2014.
9. A. M. Yaglom and I. M. Yaglom, “Probability and Information”. D. Reidel Publishing
Company. Distributed by Hindustan Publishing Corporation (India) Delhi, 1983.
10. P. G. Hoel, S. C. Port and C. J. Stone, “Introduction to Probability Theory”, Universal
Book Stall, (Reprint), 2003.
11. S. Ross, “A First Course in Probability”, Pearson Education India, 6th Ed., 2002.
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Annexure-II 4
12. W. Feller, “An Introduction to Probability Theory and its Applications”, Vol. 1, Wiley, 3rd
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Annexure-II 5
Ed., 1968.
13. N.P. Bali and Manish Goyal, A Textbook of Engineering Mathematics, Laxmi
Publications, Reprint, 2010.
14. Veerarajan T, Engineering Mathematics (for semester III), Tata McGraw-Hill, New
Delhi, 2010
Web links and Video Lectures (e-Resources):
http://nptel.ac.in/courses.php?disciplineID=111
http://www.class-
central.com/subject/math(MOOCs)
http://academicearth.org/
http://www.bookstreet.in.
VTU EDUSAT PROGRAMME – 20
VTU e-Shikshana Program
● Programming Assignment
● Seminars
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MKV-TEMPLATE for IPCC (26.04.2022) Annexure-III
MODULE-1 8 Hr
Introduction to Digital Design: Binary Logic, Basic Theorems And Properties Of Boolean Algebra, Boolean
Functions, Digital Logic Gates, Introduction, The Map Method, Four-Variable Map, Don’t-Care Conditions,
NAND and NOR Implementation, Other Hardware Description Language – Verilog Model of a simple circuit.
Text book 1: 1.9, 2.4, 2.5, 2.8, 3.1, 3.2, 3.3, 3.5, 3.6, 3.9
MODULE-2 8 Hr
Combinational Logic: Introduction, Combinational Circuits, Design Procedure, Binary Adder- Subtractor,
Decoders, Encoders, Multiplexers. HDL Models of Combinational Circuits – Adder, Multiplexer, Encoder.
Sequential Logic: Introduction, Sequential Circuits, Storage Elements: Latches, Flip-Flops.
Text book 1: 4.1, 4.2, 4.4, 4.5, 4.9, 4.10, 4.11, 4.12, 5.1, 5.2, 5.3, 5.4.
MODULE-3 8 Hr
Basic Structure of Computers: Functional Units, Basic Operational Concepts, Bus structure, Performance –
Processor Clock, Basic Performance Equation, Clock Rate, Performance Measurement.Machine Instructions
and Programs: Memory Location and Addresses, Memory Operations, Instruction and Instruction
sequencing, Addressing Modes.
Text book 2: 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 1.6, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.5
MODULE-4 8 Hr
Input/output Organization: Accessing I/O Devices, Interrupts – Interrupt Hardware, Enabling and Disabling
Interrupts, Handling Multiple Devices, Direct Memory Access: Bus Arbitration, Speed, size and Cost of
memory systems. Cache Memories – Mapping Functions.
MODULE-5 8 Hr
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MKV-TEMPLATE for IPCC (26.04.2022) Annexure-III
Basic Processing Unit: Some Fundamental Concepts: Register Transfers, Performing ALU operations, fetching
a word from Memory, Storing a word in memory. Execution of a Complete Instruction. Pipelining: Basic
concepts, Role of Cache memory, Pipeline Performance.
Sl.N Experiments
O Simulation packages preferred: Multisim, Modelsim, PSpice or any other relevant
1 Given a 4-variable logic expression, simplify it using appropriate technique and simulate the same
using basic gates.
2 Design a 4 bit full adder and subtractor and simulate the same using basic gates.
3 Design Verilog HDL to implement simple circuits using structural, Data flow and Behavioural model.
4 Design Verilog HDL to implement Binary Adder-Subtractor – Half and Full Adder, Half and Full
Subtractor.
6 Design Verilog program to implement Different types of multiplexer like 2:1, 4:1 and 8:1.
8 Design Verilog program for implementing various types of Flip-Flops such as SR, JK and D.
CIE for the theory component of the IPCC (maximum marks 50)
● IPCC means practical portion integrated with the theory of the course.
● CIE marks for the theory component are 25 marks and that for the practical component is 25
marks.
● 25 marks for the theory component are split into 15 marks for two Internal Assessment Tests (Two
Tests, each of 15 Marks with 01-hour duration, are to be conducted) and 10 marks for other
2
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MKV-TEMPLATE for IPCC (26.04.2022) Annexure-III
assessment methods mentioned in 22OB4.2. The first test at the end of 40-50% coverage of the
syllabus and the second test after covering 85-90% of the syllabus.
● Scaled-down marks of the sum of two tests and other assessment methods will be CIE marks for the
theory component of IPCC (that is for 25 marks).
● The student has to secure 40% of 25 marks to qualify in the CIE of the theory component of IPCC.
CIE for the practical component of the IPCC
● 15 marks for the conduction of the experiment and preparation of laboratory record, and 10 marks
for the test to be conducted after the completion of all the laboratory sessions.
● On completion of every experiment/program in the laboratory, the students shall be evaluated
including viva-voce and marks shall be awarded on the same day.
● The CIE marks awarded in the case of the Practical component shall be based on the continuous
evaluation of the laboratory report. Each experiment report can be evaluated for 10 marks. Marks of
all experiments’ write-ups are added and scaled down to 15 marks.
● The laboratory test (duration 02/03 hours) after completion of all the experiments shall be
conducted for 50 marks and scaled down to 10 marks.
● Scaled-down marks of write-up evaluations and tests added will be CIE marks for the laboratory
component of IPCC for 25 marks.
● The student has to secure 40% of 25 marks to qualify in the CIE of the practical component of the
IPCC.
SEE for IPCC
Theory SEE will be conducted by University as per the scheduled timetable, with common question
papers for the course (duration 03 hours)
1. The question paper will have ten questions. Each question is set for 20 marks.
2. There will be 2 questions from each module. Each of the two questions under a module (with a
maximum of 3 sub-questions), should have a mix of topics under that module.
3. The students have to answer 5 full questions, selecting one full question from each module.
4. Marks scored by the student shall be proportionally scaled down to 50 Marks
The theory portion of the IPCC shall be for both CIE and SEE, whereas the practical portion will
have a CIE component only. Questions mentioned in the SEE paper may include questions from
the practical component.
Suggested Learning Resources:
Books
1. M. Morris Mano & Michael D. Ciletti, Digital Design With an Introduction to Verilog Design, 5e,
Pearson Education.
2. Carl Hamacher, ZvonkoVranesic, SafwatZaky, Computer Organization, 5th Edition, Tata McGraw
Hill.
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MKV-TEMPLATE for IPCC (26.04.2022) Annexure-III
Assign the group task to Design the various types of counters and display the output accordingly
Assessment Methods
● Lab Assessment (25 Marks)
● GATE Based Aptitude Test
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MKV-TEMPLATE for IPCC (26.04.2022) Annexure-III
Course objectives:
● To Demonstrate the need for OS and different types of OS
● To discuss suitable techniques for management of different resources
● To demonstrate different APIs/Commands related to
processor, memory, storage and file system management.
MODULE-1 8 Hours
Introduction to operating systems, System structures: What operating systems do; Computer System
organization; Computer System architecture; Operating System structure; Operating System operations;
Process management; Memory management; Storage management; Protection and Security; Distributed
system; Special-purpose systems; Computing environments.
Operating System Services: User - Operating System interface; System calls; Types of system calls; System
programs; Operating system design and implementation; Operating System structure; Virtual machines;
Operating System debugging, Operating System generation; System boot.
MODULE-2 8 Hours
Process Management: Process concept; Process scheduling; Operations on processes; Inter process
communication
Process Scheduling: Basic concepts; Scheduling Criteria; Scheduling Algorithms; Thread scheduling;
Multiple-processor scheduling,
MODULE-3 8 Hours
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MKV-TEMPLATE for IPCC (26.04.2022) Annexure-III
Deadlocks: System model; Deadlock characterization; Methods for handling deadlocks; Deadlock
prevention; Deadlock avoidance; Deadlock detection and recovery from deadlock.
MODULE-4 8 Hours
Secondary Storage Structure, Protection: Mass storage structures; Disk structure; Disk attachment; Disk
scheduling; Disk management; Protection: Goals of protection, Principles of protection, Domain of
protection, Access matrix.
2
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MKV-TEMPLATE for IPCC (26.04.2022) Annexure-III
Sl.N Experiments
O
1 Develop a c program to implement the Process system calls (fork (), exec(), wait(), create process,
terminate process)
2 Simulate the following CPU scheduling algorithms to find turnaround time and waiting time a) FCFS
b) SJF c) Round Robin d) Priority.
CIE for the theory component of the IPCC (maximum marks 50)
● IPCC means practical portion integrated with the theory of the course.
● CIE marks for the theory component are 25 marks and that for the practical component is 25 marks.
● 25 marks for the theory component are split into 15 marks for two Internal Assessment Tests (Two Tests,
each of 15 Marks with 01-hour duration, are to be conducted) and 10 marks for other assessment
3
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MKV-TEMPLATE for IPCC (26.04.2022) Annexure-III
methods
4
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MKV-TEMPLATE for IPCC (26.04.2022) Annexure-III
mentioned in 22OB4.2. The first test at the end of 40-50% coverage of the syllabus and the second test
after covering 85-90% of the syllabus.
● Scaled-down marks of the sum of two tests and other assessment methods will be CIE marks for the
theory component of IPCC (that is for 25 marks).
● The student has to secure 40% of 25 marks to qualify in the CIE of the theory component of IPCC.
CIE for the practical component of the IPCC
● 15 marks for the conduction of the experiment and preparation of laboratory record, and 10 marks for
the test to be conducted after the completion of all the laboratory sessions.
● On completion of every experiment/program in the laboratory, the students shall be evaluated including
viva-voce and marks shall be awarded on the same day.
● The CIE marks awarded in the case of the Practical component shall be based on the continuous
evaluation of the laboratory report. Each experiment report can be evaluated for 10 marks. Marks of all
experiments’ write-ups are added and scaled down to 15 marks.
● The laboratory test (duration 02/03 hours) after completion of all the experiments shall be conducted for
50 marks and scaled down to 10 marks.
● Scaled-down marks of write-up evaluations and tests added will be CIE marks for the laboratory
component of IPCC for 25 marks.
● The student has to secure 40% of 25 marks to qualify in the CIE of the practical component of the IPCC.
SEE for IPCC
Theory SEE will be conducted by University as per the scheduled timetable, with common question papers for
the course (duration 03 hours)
1. The question paper will have ten questions. Each question is set for 20 marks.
2. There will be 2 questions from each module. Each of the two questions under a module (with a
maximum of 3 sub-questions), should have a mix of topics under that module.
3. The students have to answer 5 full questions, selecting one full question from each module.
4. Marks scoredby the student shall be proportionally scaled down to 50 Marks
The theory portion of the IPCC shall be for both CIE and SEE, whereas the practical portion will have a
CIE component only. Questions mentioned in the SEE paper may include questions from the practical
component.
Suggested Learning Resources:
Textbooks
1. Abraham Silberschatz, Peter Baer Galvin, Greg Gagne, Operating System Principles 8th edition,
Wiley-India, 2015
Reference Books
1. Ann McHoes Ida M Fylnn, Understanding Operating System, Cengage Learning, 6th Edition
2. D.M Dhamdhere, Operating Systems: A Concept Based Approach 3rd Ed, McGraw- Hill, 2013.
3. P.C.P. Bhatt, An Introduction to Operating Systems: Concepts and Practice 4th Edition, PHI(EEE),
2014.
4. William Stallings Operating Systems: Internals and Design Principles, 6th Edition, Pearson.
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MKV-TEMPLATE for IPCC (26.04.2022) Annexure-III
1. https://youtu.be/mXw9ruZaxzQ
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MKV-TEMPLATE for IPCC (26.04.2022) Annexure-III
2. https://youtu.be/vBURTt97EkA
3. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=783KAB-
tuE4&list=PLIemF3uozcAKTgsCIj82voMK3TMR0YE_f
4. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3-
ITLMMeeXY&list=PL3pGy4HtqwD0n7bQfHjPnsWzkeRn6mkO
● Assessment Methods
o Case Study on Unix Based Systems (10 Marks)
o Lab Assessment (25 Marks)
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Module-1 8Hours
INTRODUCTION TO DATA STRUCTURES: Data Structures, Classifications (Primitive & Non-
Primitive), Data structure Operations
Review of pointers and dynamic Memory Allocation,
ARRAYS and STRUCTURES: Arrays, Dynamic Allocated Arrays, Structures and Unions,
Polynomials, Sparse Matrices, representation of Multidimensional Arrays, Strings STACKS:
Stacks, Stacks Using Dynamic Arrays, Evaluation and conversion of Expressions Text Book:
Chapter-1:1.2 Chapter-2: 2.1 to 2.7 Chapter-3: 3.1,3.2,3.6
Reference Book 1: 1.1 to 1.4
Module-2 8Hours
QUEUES: Queues, Circular Queues, Using Dynamic Arrays, Multiple Stacks and queues.
LINKED LISTS : Singly Linked, Lists and Chains, Representing Chains in C, Linked Stacks and
Queues, Polynomials
Text Book: Chapter-3: 3.3, 3.4, 3.7 Chapter-4: 4.1 to 4.4
Module-3 8Hours
LINKED LISTS : Additional List Operations, Sparse Matrices, Doubly Linked List.
TREES: Introduction, Binary Trees, Binary Tree Traversals, Threaded Binary Trees.
Text Book: Chapter-4: 4.5,4.7,4.8 Chapter-5: 5.1 to 5.3, 5.5
Module-4 8Hours
TREES(Cont..): Binary Search trees, Selection Trees, Forests, Representation of Disjoint sets,
Counting Binary Trees,
GRAPHS: The Graph Abstract Data Types, Elementary Graph Operations Text
Book: Chapter-5: 5.7 to 5.11 Chapter-6: 6.1, 6.2
Module-5 8Hours
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● For the Assignment component of the CIE, there are 25 marks and for the Internal Assessment
Test component, there are 25 marks.
● The first test will be administered after 40-50% of the syllabus has been covered, and the
second test will be administered after 85-90% of the syllabus has been covered
● Any two assignment methods mentioned in the 22OB2.4, if an assignment is project-based then
only one assignment for the course shall be planned. The teacher should not conduct two
assignments at the end of the semester if two assignments are planned.
● For the course, CIE marks will be based on a scaled-down sum of two tests and other methods
of assessment.
Internal Assessment Test question paper is designed to attain the different levels of Bloom’s
taxonomy as per the outcome defined for the course.
Semester-End Examination:
Theory SEE will be conducted by University as per the scheduled timetable, with common question papers
for the course (duration 03 hours).
1. The question paper will have ten questions. Each question is set for 20 marks.
2. There will be 2 questions from each module. Each of the two questions under a module (with a
maximum of 3 sub-questions), should have a mix of topics under that module.
3. The students have to answer 5 full questions, selecting one full question from each module.
4. Marks scored shall be proportionally reduced to 50 marks
Suggested Learning Resources:
Textbook:
1. Ellis Horowitz, Sartaj Sahni and Susan Anderson-Freed, Fundamentals of Data Structures
in C, 2nd Ed, Universities Press, 2014
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Reference Books:
1. Seymour Lipschutz, Data Structures Schaum's Outlines, Revised 1st Ed, McGraw Hill,
2014.
2. Gilberg & Forouzan, Data Structures: A Pseudo-code approach with C, 2nd Ed, Cengage
Learning,2014.
3. Reema Thareja, Data Structures using C, 3rd Ed, Oxford press, 2012.
4. Jean-Paul Tremblay & Paul G. Sorenson, An Introduction to Data Structures with
Applications, 2nd Ed, McGraw Hill, 2013
5. A M Tenenbaum, Data Structures using C, PHI, 1989
6. Robert Kruse, Data Structures and Program Design in C, 2nd Ed, PHI, 1996.
Web links and Video Lectures (e-Resources):
● http://elearning.vtu.ac.in/econtent/courses/video/CSE/06CS35.html
● https://nptel.ac.in/courses/106/105/106105171/
● http://www.nptelvideos.in/2012/11/data-structures-and-algorithms.html
● https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Xo6P_V-qns&t=201s
● https://ds2-iiith.vlabs.ac.in/exp/selection-sort/index.html
● https://nptel.ac.in/courses/106/102/106102064/
● https://ds1-iiith.vlabs.ac.in/exp/stacks-queues/index.html
● https://ds1-iiith.vlabs.ac.in/exp/linked-list/basics/overview.html
● https://ds1-iiith.vlabs.ac.in/List%20of%20experiments.html
● https://ds1-iiith.vlabs.ac.in/exp/tree-traversal/index.html
● https://ds1-iiith.vlabs.ac.in/exp/tree-traversal/depth-first-traversal/dft-practice.html
● https://infyspringboard.onwingspan.com/web/en/app/toc/lex_auth_013501595428077568125
59/overview
Activity Based Learning (Suggested Activities in Class)/ Practical Based learning
● Role Play
● Flipped classroom
● Assessment Methods for 25 Marks (opt two Learning Activities)
o Case Study
o Programming Assignment
o Gate Based Aptitude Test
o MOOC Assignment for selected Module
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6. Develop a menu driven Program in C for the following operations on Circular QUEUE of
Characters (Array Implementation of Queue with maximum size MAX)
a. Insert an Element on to Circular QUEUE
b. Delete an Element from Circular QUEUE
c. Demonstrate Overflow and Underflow situations on Circular QUEUE
d. Display the status of Circular QUEUE
e. Exit
Support the program with appropriate functions for each of the above operations
7. Develop a menu driven Program in C for the following operations on Singly Linked List (SLL)
of Student Data with the fields: USN, Name, Programme, Sem,
PhNo
a. Create a SLL of N Students Data by using front insertion.
b. Display the status of SLL and count the number of nodes in it
c. Perform Insertion / Deletion at End of SLL
d. Perform Insertion / Deletion at Front of SLL(Demonstration of stack)
e. Exit
8. Develop a menu driven Program in C for the following operations on Doubly Linked List (DLL)
of Employee Data with the fields: SSN, Name, Dept, Designation,
Sal, PhNo
a. Create a DLL of N Employees Data by using end insertion.
b. Display the status of DLL and count the number of nodes in it
c. Perform Insertion and Deletion at End of DLL
d. Perform Insertion and Deletion at Front of DLL
e. Demonstrate how this DLL can be used as Double Ended Queue.
f. Exit
9. Develop a Program in C for the following operationson Singly Circular Linked List (SCLL) with
header nodes
a. Represent and Evaluate a Polynomial P(x,y,z) = 6x2y2z-4yz5+3x3yz+2xy5z-2xyz3
b. Find the sum of two polynomials POLY1(x,y,z) and POLY2(x,y,z) and store the
result in POLYSUM(x,y,z)
Support the program with appropriate functions for each of the above operations
10. Develop a menu driven Program in C for the following operations on Binary Search Tree
(BST) of Integers .
a. Create a BST of N Integers: 6, 9, 5, 2, 8, 15, 24, 14, 7, 8, 5, 2
b. Traverse the BST in Inorder, Preorder and Post Order
c. Search the BST for a given element (KEY) and report the appropriate message
d. Exit
11. Develop a Program in C for the following operations on Graph(G) of Cities
a. Create a Graph of N cities using Adjacency Matrix.
b. Print all the nodes reachable from a given starting node in a digraph using DFS/BFS
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12. Given a File of N employee records with a set K of Keys (4-digit) which uniquely determine
the records in file F. Assume that file F is maintained in memory by a Hash Table (HT) of m
memory locations with L as the set of memory addresses (2-digit) of locations in HT. Let the
keys in K and addresses in L are Integers. Develop a Program in C that uses Hash function H:
K →L as H(K)=K mod m (remainder method), and implement hashing
technique to map a given key K to the address space L. Resolve the collision (if any) using
linear probing.
Laboratory Outcomes: The student should be able to:
Course objectives:
● To learn primitive constructs JAVA programming language.
● To understand Object Oriented Programming Features of JAVA.
Module-1
An Overview of Java: Object-Oriented Programming (Two Paradigms, Abstraction, The Three OOP
Principles), Using Blocks of Code, Lexical Issues (Whitespace, Identifiers, Literals, Comments,
Separators, The Java Keywords).
Data Types, Variables, and Arrays: The Primitive Types (Integers, Floating-Point Types, Characters,
Booleans), Variables, Type Conversion and Casting, Automatic Type Promotion in Expressions, Arrays,
Introducing Type Inference with Local Variables.
Operators: Arithmetic Operators, Relational Operators, Boolean Logical Operators, The Assignment
Operator, The ? Operator, Operator Precedence, Using Parentheses.
Control Statements: Java’s Selection Statements (if, The Traditional switch), Iteration Statements
(while, do-while, for, The For-Each Version of the for Loop, Local Variable Type Inference in a for Loop,
Nested Loops), Jump Statements (Using break, Using continue, return).
Chapter 2, 3, 4, 5
Module-2
Introducing Classes: Class Fundamentals, Declaring Objects, Assigning Object Reference Variables,
Introducing Methods, Constructors, The this Keyword, Garbage Collection.
Methods and Classes: Overloading Methods, Objects as Parameters, Argument Passing, Returning
Objects, Recursion, Access Control, Understanding static, Introducing final, Introducing Nested and
Inner Classes.
Chapter 6, 7
Module-3
Inheritance: Inheritance Basics, Using super, Creating a Multilevel Hierarchy, When Constructors Are
Executed, Method Overriding, Dynamic Method Dispatch, Using Abstract Classes, Using final with
Inheritance, Local Variable Type Inference and Inheritance, The Object Class.
Interfaces: Interfaces, Default Interface Methods, Use static Methods in an Interface, Private Interface
Methods.
Chapter 8, 9
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Annexure-II 2
Module-4
Packages: Packages, Packages and Member Access, Importing Packages.
Exceptions: Exception-Handling Fundamentals, Exception Types, Uncaught Exceptions, Using try and
catch, Multiple catch Clauses, Nested try Statements, throw, throws, finally, Java’s Built-in Exceptions,
Creating Your Own Exception Subclasses, Chained Exceptions.
Chapter 9, 10
Module-5
Multithreaded Programming: The Java Thread Model, The Main Thread, Creating a Thread, Creating
Multiple Threads, Using isAlive() and join(), Thread Priorities, Synchronization, Interthread
Communication, Suspending, Resuming, and Stopping Threads, Obtaining a Thread’s State.
Enumerations, Type Wrappers and Autoboxing: Enumerations (Enumeration Fundamentals, The
values() and valueOf() Methods), Type Wrappers (Character, Boolean, The Numeric Type Wrappers),
Autoboxing (Autoboxing and Methods, Autoboxing/Unboxing Occurs in Expressions,
Autoboxing/Unboxing Boolean and Character Values).
Chapter 11, 12
Course outcome (Course Skill Set)
At the end of the course, the student will be able to:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in writing simple programs involving branching and looping structures.
2. Design a class involving data members and methods for the given scenario.
3. Apply the concepts of inheritance and interfaces in solving real world problems.
4. Use the concept of packages and exception handling in solving complex problem
5. Apply concepts of multithreading, autoboxing and enumerations in program development
1. Develop a JAVA program to add TWO matrices of suitable order N (The value of N should be read from
command line arguments).
2. Develop a stack class to hold a maximum of 10 integers with suitable methods. Develop a JAVA main
method to illustrate Stack operations.
3. A class called Employee, which models an employee with an ID, name and salary, is designed as shown in
the following class diagram. The method raiseSalary (percent) increases the salary by the given
percentage. Develop the Employee class and suitable main method for demonstration.
4. A class called MyPoint, which models a 2D point with x and y coordinates, is designed as follows:
● Two instance variables x (int) and y (int).
● A default (or "no-arg") constructor that construct a point at the default location of (0, 0).
● A overloaded constructor that constructs a point with the given x and y coordinates.
● A method setXY() to set both x and y.
● A method getXY() which returns the x and y in a 2-element int array.
● A toString() method that returns a string description of the instance in the format "(x, y)".
● A method called distance(int x, int y) that returns the distance from this point to another point at the
given (x, y) coordinates
● An overloaded distance(MyPoint another) that returns the distance from this point to the given
MyPoint instance (called another)
● Another overloaded distance() method that returns the distance from this point to the origin (0,0)
Develop the code for the class MyPoint. Also develop a JAVA program (called TestMyPoint) to test all the
methods defined in the class.
5. Develop a JAVA program to create a class named shape. Create three sub classes namely: circle, triangle
and square, each class has two member functions named draw () and erase (). Demonstrate
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Annexure-II 3
polymorphism concepts by developing suitable methods, defining member data and main program.
6. Develop a JAVA program to create an abstract class Shape with abstract methods calculateArea() and
calculatePerimeter(). Create subclasses Circle and Triangle that extend the Shape class and implement
the respective methods to calculate the area and perimeter of each shape.
7. Develop a JAVA program to create an interface Resizable with methods resizeWidth(int width) and
resizeHeight(int height) that allow an object to be resized. Create a class Rectangle that implements the
Resizable interface and implements the resize methods
8. Develop a JAVA program to create an outer class with a function display. Create another class inside the
outer class named inner with a function called display and call the two functions in the main class.
9. Develop a JAVA program to raise a custom exception (user defined exception) for DivisionByZero using
try, catch, throw and finally.
10. Develop a JAVA program to create a package named mypack and import & implement it in a suitable
class.
11. Write a program to illustrate creation of threads using runnable class. (start method start each of the
newly created thread. Inside the run method there is sleep() for suspend the thread for 500
milliseconds).
12. Develop a program to create a class MyThread in this class a constructor, call the base class constructor,
using super and start the thread. The run method of the class starts after this. It can be observed that
both main thread and created child thread are executed concurrently.
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Annexure-II 4
CIE for the theory component of the IPCC (maximum marks 50)
● IPCC means practical portion integrated with the theory of the course.
● CIE marks for the theory component are 25 marks and that for the practical component is 25 marks.
● 25 marks for the theory component are split into 15 marks for two Internal Assessment Tests (Two
Tests, each of 15 Marks with 01-hour duration, are to be conducted) and 10 marks for other assessment
methods mentioned in 22OB4.2. The first test at the end of 40-50% coverage of the syllabus and the
second test after covering 85-90% of the syllabus.
● Scaled-down marks of the sum of two tests and other assessment methods will be CIE marks for the
theory component of IPCC (that is for 25 marks).
● The student has to secure 40% of 25 marks to qualify in the CIE of the theory component of IPCC.
CIE for the practical component of the IPCC
● 15 marks for the conduction of the experiment and preparation of laboratory record, and 10 marks for
the test to be conducted after the completion of all the laboratory sessions.
● On completion of every experiment/program in the laboratory, the students shall be evaluated including
viva-voce and marks shall be awarded on the same day.
● The CIE marks awarded in the case of the Practical component shall be based on the continuous
evaluation of the laboratory report. Each experiment report can be evaluated for 10 marks. Marks of all
experiments’ write-ups are added and scaled down to 15 marks.
● The laboratory test (duration 02/03 hours) after completion of all the experiments shall be conducted
for 50 marks and scaled down to 10 marks.
● Scaled-down marks of write-up evaluations and tests added will be CIE marks for the laboratory
component of IPCC for 25 marks.
● The student has to secure 40% of 25 marks to qualify in the CIE of the practical component of the IPCC.
SEE for IPCC
Theory SEE will be conducted by University as per the scheduled timetable, with common question papers for
the course (duration 03 hours)
1. The question paper will have ten questions. Each question is set for 20 marks.
2. There will be 2 questions from each module. Each of the two questions under a module (with a
maximum of 3 sub-questions), should have a mix of topics under that module.
3. The students have to answer 5 full questions, selecting one full question from each module.
4. Marks scored by the student shall be proportionally scaled down to 50 Marks
The theory portion of the IPCC shall be for both CIE and SEE, whereas the practical portion will have a
CIE component only. Questions mentioned in the SEE paper may include questions from the practical
component.
Suggested Learning Resources:
Textbook
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Annexure-II 5
1. Java: The Complete Reference, Twelfth Edition, by Herbert Schildt, November 2021, McGraw-Hill, ISBN:
9781260463422
Reference Books
1. Programming with Java, 6th Edition, by E Balagurusamy, Mar-2019, McGraw Hill Education, ISBN:
9789353162337.
2. Thinking in Java, Fourth Edition, by Bruce Eckel, Prentice Hall, 2006
(https://sd.blackball.lv/library/thinking_in_java_4th_edition.pdf)
Assessment Method
● Programming Assignment / Course Project
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Annexure-II 1
Module-1 5 Hours
An overview of C++: What is object-Oriented Programming? Introducing C++ Classes, The
General Form of a C++ Program.
Classes and Objects: Classes, Friend Functions, Friend Classes, Inline Functions,
Parameterized Constructors, Static Class Members, When Constructors and Destructors are
Executed, The Scope Resolution Operator, Passing Objects to functions, Returning Objects,
Object Assignment
Ch 11, Ch 12
Module-2 6 Hours
Arrays, Pointers, References, and the Dynamic Allocation Operators: Arrays of Objects,
Pointers to Objects, The this Pointer, Pointers to derived types, Pointers to class members.
Functions Overloading, Copy Constructors: Functions Overloading, Overloading Constructor
Functions. Copy Constructors, Default Function Arguments, Function Overloading and
Ambiguity.
Ch 13, Ch 14
Module-3 6 Hours
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Annexure-II 2
Ch 17, Ch 18
Module-5 6 Hours
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Annexure-II 3
Practical Component
Sl.NO Experiments
1 Develop a C++ program to find the largest of three numbers
2
Develop a C++ program to sort the elements in ascending and descending order.
3 Develop a C++ program using classes to display student name, roll number, marks obtained in two
subjects and total score of student
4 Develop a C++ program for a bank empolyee to print name of the employee, account_no. & balance.
Print invalid balance if amount<500, Display the same, also display the balance after withdraw and
deposit.
5
Develop a C++ program to demonstrate function overloading for the following prototypes.
add(int a, int b)
add(double a, double b
6
Develop a C++ program using Operator Overloading for overloading Unary minus operator.
7 Develop a C++ program to implement Multiple inheritance for performing arithmetic operation of
two numbers
8 Develop a C++ program using Constructor in Derived classes to initialize alpha, beta and gamma and
display corresponding values.
9 Develop a C++ program to create a text file, check file created or not, if created it will write some
text into the file and then read the text from the file.
10
Develop a C++ program to write and read time in/from binary file using fstream
11 Develop a function which throws a division by zero exception and catch it in catch block. Write a
C++ program to demonstrate usage of try, catch and throw to handle exception.
12 Develop a C++ program that handles array out of bounds exception using C++.
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Annexure-II 4
CIE for the theory component of the IPCC (maximum marks 50)
● IPCC means practical portion integrated with the theory of the course.
● CIE marks for the theory component are 25 marks and that for the practical component is 25 marks.
● 25 marks for the theory component are split into 15 marks for two Internal Assessment Tests (Two
Tests, each of 15 Marks with 01-hour duration, are to be conducted) and 10 marks for other
assessment methods mentioned in 22OB4.2. The first test at the end of 40-50% coverage of the
syllabus and the second test after covering 85-90% of the syllabus.
● Scaled-down marks of the sum of two tests and other assessment methods will be CIE marks for the
theory component of IPCC (that is for 25 marks).
● The student has to secure 40% of 25 marks to qualify in the CIE of the theory component of IPCC.
1. The question paper will have ten questions. Each question is set for 20 marks.
2. There will be 2 questions from each module. Each of the two questions under a module (with a
maximum of 3 sub-questions), should have a mix of topics under that module.
3. The students have to answer 5 full questions, selecting one full question from each module.
4. Marks scored by the student shall be proportionally scaled down to 50 Marks
The theory portion of the IPCC shall be for both CIE and SEE, whereas the practical portion will have
a CIE component only. Questions mentioned in the SEE paper may include questions from the
practical component.
4
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BSCK307 – Social Connect & Responsibility 2022 Scheme & syllabus 3rd sem
Part II :
Heritage walk and crafts corner:
Heritage tour, knowing the history and culture of the city, connecting to people around through their history, knowing the
city and its craftsman, photo blog and documentary on evolution and practice of various craft forms - – Objectives,Visit,
case study, report, outcomes.
Part III :
Organic farming and waste management:
Usefulness of organic farming, wet waste management in neighboring villages, and implementation in the campus –
1
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BSCK307 – Social Connect & Responsibility 2022 Scheme & syllabus 3rd sem
Part IV:
Water conservation:
Knowing the present practices in the surrounding villages and implementation in the campus, documentary or photoblog
presenting the current practices – Objectives, Visit, case study, report, outcomes.
Part V :
Food walk:
City’s culinary practices, food lore, and indigenous materials of the region used in cooking – Objectives, Visit, case study,
report, outcomes.
Course outcomes (Course Skill Set):
At the end of the course, the student will be able to:
CO1: Communicate and connect to the surrounding.
CO2: Create a responsible connection with the society.
CO3: Involve in the community in general in which they work.
CO4: Notice the needs and problems of the community and involve them in problem –solving.
CO5: Develop among themselves a sense of social & civic responsibility & utilize their knowledge in
finding practical solutions to individual and community problems.
CO6: Develop competence required for group-living and sharing of responsibilities & gain skills
in mobilizing community participation to acquire leadership qualities and democratic attitudes.
Activities:
Jamming session, open mic, and poetry: Platform to connect to others. Share the stories with others. Share the
experience of Social Connect. Exhibit the talent like playing instruments, singing, one-act play, art-painting, and
fine art.
PEDAGOGY:
The pedagogy will include interactive lectures, inspiring guest talks, field visits, social immersion, and a course
project. Applying and synthesizing information from these sources to define the social problem to address and take
up the solution as the course project, with your group. Social immersionwith NGOs/social sections will be a key
part of the course. Will all lead to the course project that will address the needs of the social sector?
COURSE TOPICS:
The course will introduce social context and various players in the social space, and present approaches to
discovering and understanding social needs. Social immersion and inspiring conversional will culminate in
developing an actual, idea for problem-based intervention, based on an in-depth understanding of a key social
problem.
Duration :
A total of 40 - 50 hrs engagement per semester is required for the 3rd semester of the B.E.
/B.Tech. program. The students will be divided into groups. Each group will be handled by faculty mentor. Faculty
mentor will design the activities (particularly Jamming sessions open mic ,and poetry) Faculty mentors has to
design the evaluation system as per VTU guidelines of scheme & syllabus.
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BSCK307 – Social Connect & Responsibility 2022 Scheme & syllabus 3rd sem
be evaluated on the basis of the following criteria and/or other relevant criteria pertaining to the activity
completed. Marks allotted for the diary are out of 50. Planning and scheduling the social connect Information/Data
collected during the social connect Analysis of the information/data and report writing Considering all above
points allotting the marks as mentioned below
Excellent : 80 to 100
Good : 60 to 79
Satisfactory : 40 to 59
Unsatisfactory and fail : <39
Special Note :
NO SEE – Semester End Exam – Completely Practical and activities based evaluation
Pedagogy – Guidelines :
It may differ depending on local resources available for the study as well as environment and
climatic differences, location and time of execution.
1. Plantation and May be Farmers land/ parks / Site selection Report should Evaluation as
adoption of a individual Villages / roadside/ /proper be submitted per the rubrics
or team community area / consultation/Contin by individual to Of scheme and
tree:
College campus etc….. uous monitoring/ the syllabus by
Information board concerned Faculty
evaluation authority
2. Heritage walk May be Temples / monumental Site selection Report should Evaluation as
and crafts individual places / Villages/ City /proper be submitted per the rubrics
or team Areas / Grama consultation/Contin by individual to Of scheme and
corner:
panchayat/ public uous monitoring/ the concerned syllabus by
associations/Governme Information board evaluation authority Faculty
nt Schemes officers/
campus etc…..
3. Organic farming May be Farmers land / parks / Group selection / Report should Evaluation as
and waste individual Villages visits proper be submitted per the rubrics
or team / roadside/ community consultation by individual to Of scheme and
management:
area / College campus / Continuous the concerned syllabus by
etc….. monitoring / evaluation authority Faculty
Information
board
4. Water May be Villages/ City Areas / site selection / Report should Evaluation as
individual Grama proper be submitted per the rubrics
conservation:
or team panchayat/ public consultation/Contin by individual to Of scheme and
& conservation
associations/Governme uous monitoring/ the concerned syllabus by
techniques
nt Schemes officers / Information board evaluation authority Faculty
campus etc…..
5. Food walk: May be Villages/ City Areas / Group selection / Report should Evaluation as
Practices in individual Grama proper be submitted per the rubrics
or team panchayat/ public consultation by individual to Of scheme and
society
associations/Governme / Continuous the concerned syllabus by
nt Schemes officers/ monitoring / evaluation authority Faculty
campus etc….. Information
3
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BSCK307 – Social Connect & Responsibility 2022 Scheme & syllabus 3rd sem
board
4
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BSCK307 – Social Connect & Responsibility 2022 Scheme & syllabus 3rd sem
5
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Template for Practical Course and if AEC is a practical Course Annexure-V
Sl.NO Experiments
1 Getting Started with Excel: Creation of spread sheets, Insertion of rows and columns, Drag &
Fill, use of Aggregate functions.
2
Working with Data : Importing data, Data Entry & Manipulation, Sorting & Filtering.
3
Working with Data: Data Validation, Pivot Tables & Pivot Charts.
4 Data Analysis Process: Conditional Formatting, What-If Analysis, Data Tables, Charts &
Graphs.
5
Cleaning Data with Text Functions: use of UPPER and LOWER, TRIM function, Concatenate.
6 Cleaning Data Containing Date and Time Values: use of DATEVALUE function, DATEADD and
DATEDIF, TIMEVALUE functions.
8 Working with Multiple Sheets: work with multiple sheets within a workbook is crucial for
organizing and managing data, perform complex calculations and create comprehensive
reports.
9 Create worksheet with following fields: Empno, Ename, Basic Pay(BP), Travelling
Allowance(TA), Dearness Allowance(DA), House Rent Allowance(HRA), Income Tax(IT),
Provident Fund(PF), Net Pay(NP). Use appropriate formulas to calculate the above scenario.
Analyse the data using appropriate chart and report the data.
10 Create worksheet on Inventory Management: Sheet should contain Product code, Product
name, Product type, MRP, Cost after % of discount, Date of purchase. Use appropriate
formulas to calculate the above scenario. Analyse the data using appropriate chart and
report the data.
1154.0099.22002233
Template for Practical Course and if AEC is a practical Course Annexure-V
11 Create worksheet on Sales analysis of Merchandise Store: data consisting of Order ID,
Customer ID, Gender, age, date of order, month, online platform, Category of product, size,
quantity, amount, shipping city and other details. Use of formula to segregate
different
categories and perform a comparative study using pivot tables and different sort of charts.
12 Generation of report & presentation using Autofilter ¯o.
● Berk & Carey - Data Analysis with Microsoft® Excel: Updated for Offi ce 2007®, Third
Edition, © 2010 Brooks/Cole, Cengage Learning, ISBN-13: 978-0-495-39178-4
● Wayne L. Winston - Microsoft Excel 2019: Data Analysis And Business Modeling, PHI,
ISBN: 9789389347180
● Aryan Gupta - Data Analysis in Excel: The Best Guide.
(https://www.simplilearn.com/tutorials/excel-tutorial/data-analysis-excel)
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Template for Practical Course and if AEC is a practical Course Annexure-V
R Programming Semester 3
Course Code BCS358B CIE Marks 50
Teaching Hours/Week (L:T:P: S) 0:0:2:0 SEE Marks 50
Credits 01 Exam Hours 02
Examination type (SEE) Practical
Course objectives:
● To explore and understand how R and R Studio interactive environment.
● To understand the different data Structures, data types in R.
● To learn and practice programming techniques using R programming.
● To import data into R from various data sources and generate visualizations.
● To draw insights from datasets using data analytics techniques.
Sl.NO Experiments
1 Demonstrate the steps for installation of R and R Studio. Perform the following:
a) Assign different type of values to variables and display the type of variable. Assign different types
such as Double, Integer, Logical, Complex and Character and understand the difference between
each data type.
b) Demonstrate Arithmetic and Logical Operations with simple examples.
c) Demonstrate generation of sequences and creation of vectors.
d) Demonstrate Creation of Matrices
e) Demonstrate the Creation of Matrices from Vectors using Binding Function.
f) Demonstrate element extraction from vectors, matrices and arrays
Suggested Reading – Text Book 1 – Chapter 1 (What is R, Installing R, Choosing an IDE – RStudio, How to
Get Help in R, Installing Extra Related Software), Chapter 2 (Mathematical Operations and Vectors,
Assigning Variables, Special Numbers, Logical Vectors), Chapter 3 (Classes, Different Types of Numbers,
Other Common Classes, Checking and Changing Classes, Examining Variables )
2 Assess the Financial Statement of an Organization being supplied with 2 vectors of data: Monthly Revenue
and Monthly Expenses for the Financial Year. You can create your own sample data vector for this
experiment) Calculate the following financial metrics:
a. Profit for each month.
b. Profit after tax for each month (Tax Rate is 30%).
c. Profit margin for each month equals to profit after tax divided by revenue.
d. Good Months – where the profit after tax was greater than the mean for the year.
e. Bad Months – where the profit after tax was less than the mean for the year.
f. The best month – where the profit after tax was max for the year.
g. The worst month – where the profit after tax was min for the year.
Note:
a. All Results need to be presented as vectors
b. Results for Dollar values need to be calculated with $0.01 precision, but need to be presented in
Units of $1000 (i.e 1k) with no decimal points
c. Results for the profit margin ratio need to be presented in units of % with no decimal point.
d. It is okay for tax to be negative for any given month (deferred tax asset)
e. Generate CSV file for the data.
Suggested Reading – Text Book 1 – Chapter 4 (Vectors, Combining Matrices)
3 Develop a program to create two 3 X 3 matrices A and B and perform the following operations a)
Transpose of the matrix b) addition c) subtraction d) multiplication
Suggested Reading – Text Book 1 – Chapter 4 (Matrices and Arrays – Array Arithmetic)
4 Develop a program to find the factorial of given number using recursive function calls.
Suggested Reading – Reference Book 1 – Chapter 5 (5.5 – Recursive Programming)
Text Book 1 – Chapter 8 (Flow Control and Loops – If and Else, Vectorized If, while loops, for loops),
Chapter 6 (Creating and Calling Functions, Passing Functions to and from other functions)
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Template for Practical Course and if AEC is a practical Course Annexure-V
5 Develop an R Program using functions to find all the prime numbers up to a specified number by the
method of Sieve of Eratosthenes.
Suggested Reading – Reference Book
1 - Chapter 5 (5.5 – Recursive Programming)
Text Book 1 – Chapter 8 (Flow Control and Loops – If and Else, Vectorized If, while loops, for loops),
Chapter 6 (Creating and Calling Functions, Passing Functions to and from other functions)
6 The built-in data set mammals contain data on body weight versus brain weight. Develop R commands
to:
a) Find the Pearson and Spearman correlation coefficients. Are they similar?
b) Plot the data using the plot command.
c) Plot the logarithm (log) of each variable and see if that makes a difference.
Suggested Reading – Text Book 1 –Chapter 12 – (Built-in Datasets) Chapter 14 – (Scatterplots)
Reference Book 2 – 13.2.5 (Covariance and Correlation)
7 Develop R program to create a Data Frame with following details and do the following operations.
a) Subset the Data frame and display the details of only those items whose price is greater than or equal
to 350.
b) Subset the Data frame and display only the items where the category is either “Office Supplies” or
“Desktop Supplies”
c) Create another Data Frame called “item-details” with three different fields itemCode, ItemQtyonHand
and ItemReorderLvl and merge the two frames
8 Let us use the built-in dataset air quality which has Daily air quality measurements in New York, May to
September 1973. Develop R program to generate histogram by using appropriate arguments for the
following statements.
a) Assigning names, using the air quality data set.
b) Change colors of the Histogram
c) Remove Axis and Add labels to Histogram
d) Change Axis limits of a Histogram
e) Add Density curve to the histogram
Suggested Reading –Reference Book 2 – Chapter 7 (7.4 – The ggplot2 Package), Chapter 24 (Smoothing
and Shading )
9 Design a data frame in R for storing about 20 employee details. Create a CSV file named “input.csv” that
defines all the required information about the employee such as id, name, salary, start_date, dept. Import into
R and do the following analysis.
a) Find the total number rows & columns
b) Find the maximum salary
c) Retrieve the details of the employee with maximum salary
d) Retrieve all the employees working in the IT Department.
e) Retrieve the employees in the IT Department whose salary is greater than 20000 and write these
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Template for Practical Course and if AEC is a practical Course Annexure-V
10 Using the built in dataset mtcars which is a popular dataset consisting of the design and fuel consumption
patterns of 32 different automobiles. The data was extracted from the 1974 Motor Trend US magazine, and
comprises fuel consumption and 10 aspects of automobile design and performance for 32 automobiles
(1973-74 models). Format A data frame with 32 observations on 11 variables : [1] mpg Miles/(US) gallon,
[2] cyl Number of cylinders [3] disp Displacement (cu.in.), [4] hp Gross horsepower [5] drat Rear axle
ratio,[6] wt Weight (lb/1000) [7] qsec 1/4 mile time, [8] vs V/S, [9] am Transmission (0 = automatic, 1 =
manual), [10] gear Number of forward gears, [11] carb Number of carburetors
1. https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/explore/vignettes/explore_mtcars.html
2. https://www.w3schools.com/r/r_stat_data_set.asp
3. https://rpubs.com/BillB/217355
11 Demonstrate the progression of salary with years of experience using a suitable data set (You can create
your own dataset). Plot the graph visualizing the best fit line on the plot of the given data points. Plot a
curve of Actual Values vs. Predicted values to show their correlation and performance of the model.
Interpret the meaning of the slope and y-intercept of the line with respect to the given data. Implement
using lm function. Save the graphs and coefficients in files. Attach the predicted values of salaries as a new
column to the original data set and save the data as a new CSV file.
Suggested Reading – Reference Book 2 – Chapter 20 (General Concepts, Statistical Inference, Prediction)
● Total marks scored by the students are scaled down to 30 marks (60% of maximum marks).
● Weightage to be given for neatness and submission of record/write-up on time.
● Department shall conduct a test of 100 marks after the completion of all the experiments listed in
the syllabus.
● In a test, test write-up, conduction of experiment, acceptable result, and procedural knowledge will
carry a weightage of 60% and the rest 40% for viva-voce.
● The suitable rubrics can be designed to evaluate each student’s performance and learning ability.
● The marks scored shall be scaled down to 20 marks (40% of the maximum marks).
The Sum of scaled-down marks scored in the report write-up/journal and marks of a test is the total CIE
marks scored by the student.
Semester End Evaluation (SEE):
● SEE marks for the practical course are 50 Marks.
● SEE shall be conducted jointly by the two examiners of the same institute, examiners are
appointed by the Head of the Institute.
● The examination schedule and names of examiners are informed to the university before the
conduction of the examination. These practical examinations are to be conducted between the
schedule mentioned in the academic calendar of the University.
● Students can pick one question (experiment) from the questions lot prepared by the examiners
jointly.
● Evaluation of test write-up/ conduction procedure and result/viva will be conducted jointly by
examiners.
General rubrics suggested for SEE are mentioned here, writeup-20%, Conduction procedure and
result in -60%, Viva-voce 20% of maximum marks. SEE for practical shall be evaluated for 100 marks
and scored marks shall be scaled down to 50 marks (however, based on course type, rubrics shall be
decided by the examiners)
Change of experiment is allowed only once and 15% of Marks allotted to the procedure part are to be
made zero.
The minimum duration of SEE is 02 hours
Book:
1. Cotton, R. (2013). Learning R: A Step by Step Function Guide to Data Analysis. 1st ed. O’Reilly Media Inc.
References:
1. Jones, O., Maillardet. R. and Robinson, A. (2014). Introduction to Scientific Programming and Simulation
Using R. Chapman & Hall/CRC, The R Series.
2. Davies, T.M. (2016) The Book of R: A First Course in Programming and Statistics. No Starch Press.
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Template for Practical Course and if AEC is a practical Course Annexure-V
Create a new branch named "feature-branch." Switch to the "master" branch. Merge
the "feature-branch" into "master."
3 Creating and Managing Branches
Write the commands to stash your changes, switch branches, and then apply the
stashed changes.
4 Collaboration and Remote Repositories
Clone a remote Git repository to your local machine.
5 Collaboration and Remote Repositories
Fetch the latest changes from a remote repository and rebase your local branch onto
the updated remote branch.
6 Collaboration and Remote Repositories
Write the command to merge "feature-branch" into "master" while providing a custom
commit message for the merge.
7 Git Tags and Releases
Write the command to create a lightweight Git tag named "v1.0" for a commit in your local
repository.
Given a commit ID, how would you use Git to view the details of that specific commit,
including the author, date, and commit message?
10 Analysing and Changing Git History
Write the command to list all commits made by the author "JohnDoe" between "2023-01-01"
and "2023-12-31."
Write the command to display the last five commits in the repository's history.
Write the command to undo the changes introduced by the commit with the ID "abc123".
Course outcomes (Course Skill Set):
At the end of the course the student will be able to:
● Use the basics commands related to git repository
● Create and manage the branches
● Apply commands related to Collaboration and Remote Repositories
● Use the commands related to Git Tags, Releases and advanced git operations
● Analyse and change the git history
1154.0099.22002233
Template for Practical Course and if AEC is a practical Course Annexure-V
● Version Control with Git, 3rd Edition, by Prem Kumar Ponuthorai, Jon Loeliger Released October 2022,
Publisher(s): O'Reilly Media, Inc.
● Pro Git book, written by Scott Chacon and Ben Straub and published by Apress, https://git-
scm.com/book/en/v2
● https://infyspringboard.onwingspan.com/web/en/app/toc/lex_auth_0130944433473699842782_shared
/overview
● https://infyspringboard.onwingspan.com/web/en/app/toc/lex_auth_01330134712177459211926_share
d/overview
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● CLO 5. Working with Plotly for 3D, Time Series and Maps.
Experiments
Sl. No. PART A – List of problems for which student should develop program and execute in theLaboratory
1 a) Write a python program to find the best of two test average marks out of three test’s marks
accepted from the user.
b) Develop a Python program to check whether a given number is palindrome or not andalso count
the number of occurrences of each digit in the input number.
2 a) Defined as a function F as Fn = Fn-1 + Fn-2. Write a Python program which accepts a value for N (where
N >0) as input and pass this value to the function. Display suitable error message if the condition for
input value is not followed.
b) Develop a python program to convert binary to decimal, octal to hexadecimal using functions.
Functions:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BVfCWuca9nw
Arguments:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ijXMGpoMkhQ
Return value: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nuNXiEDnM44
3 a) Write a Python program that accepts a sentence and find the number of words, digits, uppercase letters
and lowercase letters.
b) Write a Python program to find the string similarity between two given strings
4 a) Write a Python program to Demonstrate how to Draw a Bar Plot using Matplotlib.
b) Write a Python program to Demonstrate how to Draw a Scatter Plot using Matplotlib.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RRHQ6Fs1b8w&list=PLjVLYmrlmjGcC0B_FP3bkJ-
JIPkV5GuZR&index=3
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ABCuhWO9II&list=PLjVLYmrlmjGcC0B_FP3bkJ-
JIPkV5GuZR&index=4
5
a) Write a Python program to Demonstrate how to Draw a Histogram Plot using Matplotlib.
b) Write a Python program to Demonstrate how to Draw a Pie Chart using Matplotlib.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qk7caotaQUQ&list=PLjVLYmrlmjGcC0B_FP3bkJ-
JIPkV5GuZR&index=6
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PSji21jUNO0&list=PLjVLYmrlmjGcC0B_FP3bkJ-
JIPkV5GuZR&index=7
6
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UO98lJQ3QGI&list=PL-osiE80TeTvipOqomVEeZ1HRrcEvtZB_
7
Write a Python program which explains uses of customizing seaborn plots with Aesthetic functions.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6GUZXDef2U0
8 Write a Python program to explain working with bokeh line graph using Annotations and Legends.
a) Write a Python program for plotting different types of plots using Bokeh.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HDvxYoRadcA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cCck7hCanpw&list=PLE50-dh6JzC4onX- qkv9H3HtPbBVA8M94&index=4
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xnJ2TNrGYik&list=PLE50-dh6JzC4onX- qkv9H3HtPbBVA8M94&index=5
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D35m2CdMhVs&list=PLE50-dh6JzC4onX- qkv9H3HtPbBVA8M94&index=6
The examination schedule and names of examiners are informed to the university before
the conduction of the examination. These practical examinations are to be conducted
between the schedule mentioned in the academic calendar of the University.
All laboratory experiments are to be included for practical examination.
(Rubrics) Breakup of marks and the instructions printed on the cover page of the answer
script to be strictly adhered to by the examiners. OR based on the course requirement
evaluation rubrics shall be decided jointly by examiners.
Students can pick one question (experiment) from the questions lot prepared by the
examiners jointly.
General rubrics suggested for SEE are mentioned here, writeup-20%, Conduction
procedure and result in -60%, Viva-voce 20% of maximum marks. SEE for practical shall
be evaluated for 100 marks and scored marks shall be scaled down to 50 marks
(however, based on course type, rubrics shall be decided by the examiners)
Change of experiment is allowed only once and 15% of Marks allotted to the procedure part
are to be made zero.
The minimum duration of SEE is 02 hours
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● Weightage of marks for PART A is 80% and for PART B is 20%. General rubrics suggested to be
followed for part A and part B.
● Change of experiment is allowed only once and Marks allotted to the procedure part to be made zero
(Not allowed for Part B).
● The duration of SEE is 03 hours
Rubrics suggested in Annexure-II of Regulation book
Textbooks:
1. Al Sweigart, “Automate the Boring Stuff with Python”,1stEdition, No Starch Press, 2015. (Available
under CC-BY-NC-SA license at https://automatetheboringstuff.com/)
2. Reema Thareja “Python Programming Using Problem Solving Approach” Oxford University Press.
3. Allen B. Downey, “Think Python: How to Think Like a Computer Scientist”,
2nd Edition, Green Tea Press, 2015. (Available under CC-BY-NC license at
http://greenteapress.com/thinkpython2/thinkpython2.pdf)
4. Jake VanderPlas “Python Data Science Handbook” 1st Edition, O’REILLY.