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Computer Architecture

People

Langheinrich M.

Course director

Laporte M.

Assistant

Rezaalipour M.

Assistant

Description

COURSE OBJECTIVES

After successfully completing the course, students will know the basic principles of how a computer functions, from the very basic building blocks (transistors and logical gates) to the more complex components (CPU, memory, buses, I/O interfaces).

 

COURSE DESCRIPTION

In this course, students learn how one can describe the basic operations in a computer using digital logic, and how these operations can be realized in both hardware and software. Students gradually combine these basic operations into a "microarchitecture" -- a software-controlled datapath that connects digital memory with an arithmetic-logical unit -- on which one can then build more and more complex "layers" that will finally allow the writing of complex programs in human-readable programming languages. This knowledge not only forms the basis for understanding how something as complex as a modern computer actually works, but is also a pre-requisite for learning about many advanced topics in informatics.

 

LEARNING METHODS

Frontal lectures, weekly assignments, lab sessions

 

EXAMINATION INFORMATION
The final grade will be based on a student's Midterm (30%) and Final (70%) exam scores. Optional assignments and/or quizzes (corrected but ungraded) will offer continuous learning feedback throughout the semester.

 

REFERENCES

  • "Structured Computer Organisation", Andrew S. Tanenbaum, Todd Austin. 6th Edition (International), Pearson Education, 2012, ISBN-10: 0273769243, ISBN-13: 978-0273769248

Education