From CS155

Main: HomePage

This is the home page for CS155, Introduction to Unix, part of the CSU Computer Science CS155/156/157 series.
Click on the links, above, for other class pages.


Here’s a signature date '+!!! B %-d %-I:P'

Grades Available

Tuesday October 1 9:01PM

~cs155/bin/grade will now show your final exam score (FINAL), your curved final exam score (FINAL-curved), your total score (TOTAL), and your letter grade (LETTER). The letter grade that you see is the one that you will get.

Read this if you have questions about your grade.

Raw Final Exam Scores

Tuesday October 1 9:01PM

05–09
1%
10–14
1%
15–19
7%
20–24
13%
25–29 
37%
30–34
25%
35–39
14%
40–41
1%

HW4 Soluton

Wednesday September 25 2:05PM

My solution to HW4 is available here. It’s for reading, only—you can’t save it.

No Extra Credit

Monday September 23 11:11AM

There will be no extra credit.

HW4 Available

Tuesday September 17 9:29PM

HW4 is now available.

HW3 Delayed

Sunday September 15 1:06PM

Because of weather, the due date for HW3 is one day later: Wednesday noon for full credit, late period until Thursday noon for one point off.

Quizzes Curved

Saturday, September 14 7:56PM

Curved scores for Quiz #1 and Quiz #2 are now available.

    ~cs155/bin/grade
    ~cs155/bin/grade Q1
    ~cs155/bin/grade Q1-curved

CSU Closed Friday September 13

Friday, September 13 8:17AM

No class today; CSU is closed. See http://safety.colostate.edu/ for more information.

HW3 Available

Tuesday September 10 8:04PM

HW3 is now available.

HW2 Available

Thursday September 5 10:37AM

HW2 is now available.

HW1 Available

Friday August 30 8:06PM

HW1 is now available.

No Onions in CSB

Tuesday January 22 3:11PM

Please, no onions in the Computer Science Building, including the Linux Lab. One of our faculty has a severe allergy to them.

The most useful command

The man command shows useful information about a command. Use it to find out what options you can give with a command, like this:

man command-name

Unbelievably, Google is not always the best solution, since many Unix commands are common words. Googling cat, cd, date, echo, or cut will not get you the result that you’d like.

Retrieved from http://www.cs.colostate.edu/~cs155/wiki/
Page last modified on September 25, 2013, at 03:06 PM