Thursday, August 30, 2012

Programming Classes for the Scientist ? The College of Arts and ...

Craig and I teach a?weekly seminar most weeks which provide a brief overview of using?ACISS, shell scripting, python, Matlab, and whatever else those in attendance are interested in. ? However, to provide more depth in your scientific career there are several?computer science courses offered that provide the depth that Craig and I simply don?t have the time to cover.

Required for Every Scientist

John Conery is offering a CIS 399 Course winter term (not yet listed) that will cover basics of all manner of scientific computing: scripting (Matlab, Sage/R, Python), databases, etc. ? Please keep checking the CS course list or contact him directly if you have any questions.

Computation Science is a 4/500 level course ?that covers the fundamentals of scientific programming (including parallel programming) and pairs non-computer science students with computer scientists to work on real researcher problems provided by researchers from around campus (including your own research problems). ? For biologists, a great course to be taken at the same time is?Bioinformatics. ? Im not sure if it offered every year, however.

Basic Programming

For a novice programmer, or someone who wants to understand the fundamentals of efficient code design, both from the perspective of performance and time to code, the?Algorithms and Programming. ??These courses are offered every term and based in Python, easy-to-learn language that has a massive general following and wide adoption in the scientific community. ?The CIS 210 (Computer Science I) extends these concepts in both Java and Python.

CASSPR Blog.

Source: https://casitweb.uoregon.edu/blog/?p=9281

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