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It's otherwise quite a pain for your tutor to look at your code and to find any mistakes (that is your job!). Otherwise, your submission will not be graded (0 points). | It's otherwise quite a pain for your tutor to look at your code and to find any mistakes (that is your job!). Otherwise, your submission will not be graded (you will get 0 points). |
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Proper write-down: 60% | Reasoning / argumentation: 60% |
Points scheme for the exercises
For programming tasks (code)
Functionality: 60% Tests: 20% Documentation, Checkstyle, etc.: 20%
Example: If your program works, but there are a couple of checkstyle errors and you don't provide any tests and documentation, you will get only 60% of the points.
Important: Test cases provided in the TIP must be implemented (the content of the test cases is important, not the exact syntax). If you program in Java or C++, your program must at least compile, i.e., ant compile resp. make compile must succeed. It's otherwise quite a pain for your tutor to look at your code and to find any mistakes (that is your job!). Otherwise, your submission will not be graded (you will get 0 points).
For theoretical tasks (proofs)
Basic idea / approach: 40% Reasoning / argumentation: 60%
Example: If you only write down the basic, correct proof idea in some vague sentences, you will get only 40% of the points. However, if your proof idea is wrong, you will get 0 points.
Important: Minor mistakes in your proof are ok and don't lead to any points deduction. But it should be obvious, that you have made some reasonable effort to show the proof.