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Computer Science: An Overview, Global Edition 13th edition


Computer Science: An Overview, Global Edition 13th edition

Paperback by Brookshear, J.; Brylow, Dennis

Computer Science: An Overview, Global Edition

£72.99

ISBN:
9781292263427
Publication Date:
25 Feb 2019
Edition/language:
13th edition / English
Publisher:
Pearson Education Limited
Pages:
736 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 8 - 9 May 2024
Computer Science: An Overview, Global Edition

Description

Develop a core understanding of the concepts of modern computer science Computer Science: An Overview, 13th edition, Global Edition, by J. Glenn Brookshear, and Dennis Brylow, is written for students from all backgrounds, giving you a bottom-up, concrete-to-abstract foundation in the subject. Its broad coverage encourages a practical and realistic understanding of computer science, covering all the major concepts. The book's broad background exposes beginning computer science students to the breadth of the subject they plan to major in and teaches students from other backgrounds how to relate to the technical society in which they live. Learn in a flexible way with independent chapters you can study in any order with full-colour design to help you engage with the information. The text also uses Python to provide programming tools for exploration and experimentation in your learning. This 13th edition has been corrected and updated in each chapter to refine your learning experience. With more than 1,000 questions and exercises, the book trains your thinking skills with useful chapter review problems and contains questions surrounding social issues to reinforce core concepts. This text is comprehensive and highly accessible, making it ideal for undergraduate studies in computer science. This title has a Companion Website.

Contents

* Asterisks indicate suggestions for optional sections. Introduction 0.1 The Role of Algorithms 0.2 The History of Computing 0.3 An Outline of Our Study 0.4 The Overarching Themes of Computer Science Data Storage 1.1 Bits and Their Storage 1.2 Main Memory 1.3 Mass Storage 1.4 Representing Information as Bit Patterns *1.5 The Binary System *1.6 Storing Integers *1.7 Storing Fractions *1.8 Data and Programming *1.9 Data Compression *1.10 Communication Errors Data Manipulation 2.1 Computer Architecture 2.2 Machine Language 2.3 Program Execution *2.4 Arithmetic/Logic Instructions *2.5 Communicating with Other Devices *2.6 Programming Data Manipulation *2.7 Other Architectures Operating Systems 3.1 The History of Operating Systems 3.2 Operating System Architecture 3.3 Coordinating the Machine's Activities *3.4 Handling Competition Among Processes 3.5 Security Networking and the Internet 4.1 Network Fundamentals 4.2 The Internet 4.3 The World Wide Web *4.4 Internet Protocols *4.5 Simple Client Server 4.6 Cybersecurity Algorithms 5.1 The Concept of an Algorithm 5.2 Algorithm Representation 5.3 Algorithm Discovery 5.4 Iterative Structures 5.5 Recursive Structures 5.6 Efficiency and Correctness Programming Languages 6.1 Historical Perspective 6.2 Traditional Programming Concepts 6.3 Procedural Units 6.4 Language Implementation 6.5 Object-Oriented Programming *6.6 Programming Concurrent Activities *6.7 Declarative Programming Software Engineering 7.1 The Software Engineering Discipline 7.2 The Software Life Cycle 7.3 Software Engineering Methodologies 7.4 Modularity 7.5 Tools of the Trade 7.6 Quality Assurance 7.7 Documentation 7.8 The Human-Machine Interface 7.9 Software Ownership and Liability Data Abstractions 8.1 Basic Data Structures 8.2 Related Concepts 8.3 Implementing Data Structures 8.4 A Short Case Study 8.5 Customized Data Types 8.6 Classes and Objects *8.7 Pointers in Machine Language Database Systems 9.1 Database Fundamentals 9.2 The Relational Model *9.3 Object-Oriented Databases *9.4 Maintaining Database Integrity *9.5 Traditional File Structures 9.6 Data Mining 9.7 Social Impact of Database Technology Computer Graphics 10.1 The Scope of Computer Graphics 10.2 Overview of 3D Graphics 10.3 Modeling 10.4 Rendering *10.5 Dealing with Global Lighting 10.6 Animation Artificial Intelligence 11.1 Intelligence and Machines 11.2 Perception 11.3 Reasoning 11.4 Additional Areas of Research 11.5 Artificial Neural Networks 11.6 Robotics 11.7 Considering the Consequences Theory of Computation 12.1 Functions and Their Computation 12.2 Turing Machines 12.3 Universal Programming Languages 12.4 A Noncomputable Function 12.5 Complexity of Problems *12.6 Public-Key Cryptography Appendixes: A. ASCII B. Circuits to Manipulate Two's Complement Representations C. Vole: A Simple Machine Language D. High-Level Programming Languages E. The Equivalence of Iterative and Recursive Structures F. Answers to Questions & Exercises Index

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