COMS303 E-Commerce Scripting Languages

FALL 2002

Tuesday Evenings - 6:00pm - 10:00pm      Room 8-05

Syllabus: 

INSTRUCTOR:  Jeff Gullion
OFFICE:  8-01-C
PHONE:  515-964-6367
EMAIL:  jhgullion@dmacc.cc.ia.us
INSTRUCTOR WEBSITE:  http://www.dmacc.cc.ia.us/instructors/jhgullion/

REQUIRED TEXT:      

INTERNET PROGRAMMING with VBscript and Javascript
by Kathleen Kalata, Course Technologies, Thomson Learning
RECOMMENDED TEXT: DYNAMIC HTML The Definitive Reference
Goodman,  Published by O'REILLY   

PREREQUISITES:                  BSEN306 E-Commerce Website I

RECOMMENDED PREREQUISITES:  BSEN307 E-Commerce Website II, COMS111

OBJECTIVES:

This course will expand upon the student's skills in the creation of a website application.  Students will learn to design, write, debug and apply scripting languages to a website application.  The focus of this course will be on client side scripting using JAVASCRIPT.   VBScript and possibly PERL will be presented if time permits. 

This course is focused on the website developer who desires the ability to design and create their own scripting applications.  In that light, this class will be very similar to a programming language class.  This class will teach you to read and write JAVASCRIPT and use it to create original scripting functions.  The focus is to teach you how to create your own scripts not just copy somebody else's work.

I. ATTENDANCE:

This class schedule includes classroom time for the presentation and discussion of material. Students are expected to have completed any assigned readings in preparation for class and be prepared to discuss the assigned material. Attendance is encouraged and expected.  Much of the primary material in this class will be presented during class.

II. ASSIGNMENTS:

  • There will be 7-10 assigned projects. Each assignment will be given a DUE DATE when assigned.
  • Each assignment will be worth 50 points.
  • Assignments turned in after the due date without prior discussion with the instructor will be reduced by 10%
  • Students are encouraged to assist each with projects but are expected to do their own work. Joint projects and any work copied from another person will not be tolerated and will be given a ZERO score.
  • Some of these projects may include team activities and classroom presentation.
  • All assignments must be in the hands of the instructor by the last day of class to receive any credit.

III.  LAB PROJECTS/QUIZZES

  • There will be 3-5  lab projects/quizzes assigned throughout the course.  
  • Each of the projects will be worth 100 points.  
  • The projects will cover a variety of skills and techniques discussed in class and in the homework projects. 
  • Each project will usually be started and completed during a portion of the class.  
  • These will be announced ahead of time.  
  • NO MAKEUP PROJECTS  WILL BE GIVEN WITHOUT PRIOR APPROVAL FROM THE INSTRUCTOR.

IV. FINAL PROJECT

  • A Final short answer exam covering the concepts and terminology discussed in class will be given. 

  • The written exam will be worth 100 points.  

  • There will be a programming project created throughout the course.  
  • This project will be demonstrated to the class during the last two weeks of class.   
  • This project will be worth 100 points.

V: COURSE GRADE:

The Final Course grade will be determined by combining your grade as follows:
Assignments 30%
Lab Projects 30%
Final Project 20%
Final Exam 20%

The grading scale is as follows: 90% AND ABOVE = A, 80% to 89% = B, 70% to 79%= C, 60% to 69 = D, 59% AND BELOW = F.   May use pluses and minuses at the instructors discretion.

VI. CHEATING AND PLAGIERISM

Engaging in any form of cheating or plagiarism on an assignment, test, quiz or project will result in a ZERO grade for that particular assignment. These acts are considered academic misconduct by the college and various disciplinary actions may be taken.

VII. This syllabus is tentative and the instructor reserves the right to make changes during the course of the semester.

VIII.   SPECIAL NEEDS

 It is the policy of DMACC to accommodate students with disabilities.  Any student with a documented  disability who requires resonable accommodation should contact the special needs coordinator at (515) 964-6850  or  (515) 964-6810 TTY.  

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SCHEDULE:

WEEK

DATE

Discussion

Lab

1 9/3
  • Introduction, Syllabus
  • Student Server & Ws_ftp
  • Introduction to Client Server Programming
  • Chapter 1
  • Chapter 2
Sign-On, Email, Instructor Website, Programming Tools, WS_ftp

Chapter 1:  Projects 1-1, 1-2, 1-6
Chapter 2:  Projects 2-1, 2-2, 2-4

2 9/10

 

  • Review Student Server
  • Review Chapters 1 & 2
  • Chapter 3 - Object Oriented Programming
  • Date Object - Examples
  • Present Programming Project!
Chapter 1 & 2 Projects DUE

Chapter 3:  Projects 3-2, 3-3, 3-4, 3-5

3 9/17
  • Review Object Oriented Programming
  • Chapter 6 - Functions & Procedures
  • In Class Object Lab
Chapter 3 Projects DUE

Chapter 6:  Projects 6-3, 6-4, 6-5

4 9/24
  • Chapter 4 - Data Storage
  • Variables (Ch. 4)
  • Arrays (Ch.4)
Chapter 6 Projects DUE

Chapter 4:  Projects 4-1, 4-2, 4-5

5 10/1
  • Chapter 5 - Control Structures
Chapter 4 Projects DUE  

Chapter 5 Projects: 5-2, 5-7

6 10/8
  • Review Ifs and Case Structures
  • Review Event Handlers (HTML)
  • Banner Rotator
  • Review Data Validation 
  • dollarFormat()
  • In Class ARRAYS LAB
 Chapter 5 Projects DUE  

Validation Lab Assigned  Class Folder on the N: drive

7 10/15
  • Review Chapters 1-6, etc.
  • Javascript QUIZ (M/C)
  • In Class Midterm Lab
8 10/22
  • Present COOKIES
  • Read/Write/Delete/Display Cookie Functions
Cookies Project

Validation Lab DUE

9 10/29
  • Review Cookies
  • Review Validation
  • Review Client Side Scripting
  • "Borrowing Scripts"
Cookies Project DUE

Programming Project -1 Assigned From N: Class Folder

10 11/5
  • Chapter 7 - Intro to ASP

Chapter 7:  Projects  7-1, 7-2, 7-3

11 11/12
  • Chapter 8 - Using the Request & Response Objects

Chapter 8:  Projects  8-1, 8-2, 8-3

Programming Project-1 DUE

12 11/19
  • Chapter 9 - Maintaining State between the Client and Server

Chapter 9:  Projects  9-2, 9-5, 9-6

13 11/26
  • Chapter 10 - ASP Components
 Chapter 10 Projects: 10-1, 10-3, 10-4
14 12/3
  • Chapter 12 - ASP and Databases
Chapter 12 Projects: 12-1
15 12/10

 Final Exam (Short Answer & Lab Project)

All projects must be posted by 10pm 12/10

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LINKS:

http://www.asp-help.com        Good ASP site with information on the various objects and other functionality

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contact Jeff Gullion for any questions or problems: jhgullion@dmacc.cc.ia.us