Formal
Languages
and the
Theory of
Computation

Spring 2008
course
navigation

syllabus

time: Tues/Thurs 10:00 - 11:20am place: Sci 217 level: advanced credits: 4 faculty: Jim Mahoney, Matt Ollis text: Introduction to the Theory of Computation, 2nd Edition, Michael Sipser, ISBN 053494728X e.g. http://www.amazon.com/dp/053494728X
A mathematical introduction to the theory of computation. Topics include automata such as Turing machines, formal languages such as context-free grammar, and computability questions as described by "NP-complete" problems and Godel's incompleteness theorem. This is an upper-level course that presents the foundations of theoretical computer science. Expect practice with lots of mathematical proofs, with programming examples to build intuition. Prerequisite: Formal mathematics and programming experience
Here is an approximate schedule, based on how the course played out in 2006. The interests and abilities of the class may steer us in a different direction this time.
Week starting 1 Jan 28 math and programming preliminaries 2 Feb 4 finite automata 3 Feb 11 regular languages 4 18 context-free grammars 5 25 pushdown automata 6 Mar 4 Turing machines mid-term evals due Mar 7 7 Mar 11 what is an algorithm? VT Town Mtg Mar 4 -- spring break -- 8 31 decidable languages 9 Apr 7 the halting problem 10 14 reducibility 11 21 P and NP 12 28 NP-completeness 13 May 5 course round-up reading days May 8 and 9 last work Wed May 14 1:30pm
http://cs.marlboro.edu/ courses/ spring2008/formal_languages/ syllabus
last modified Thursday January 24 2008 10:09 am EST