BCA Syllabus 2016-17 CBCS Revised
BCA Syllabus 2016-17 CBCS Revised
A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Andhra Pradesh State Council of Higher Education
Total
Marks
Mid Sem
Exam*
Sem End
Exam
Teaching
Hours
Credits
First Language
English
100
25
75
Foundation Course - 1
HVPE (Human Values &
50
50
50
50
100
25
75
Professional Ethics)
3
4
Foundation course -2
Communication & Soft
Skills -1
Elementary Mathematics
Computer Fundamentals
& MS office
100
25
75
MS OFFICE LAB
50
50
Programming Using C
100
25
75
Programming Using C
Lab
50
50
Photoshop Lab
50
50
28
24
Total
650
Page 1 of 83
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Andhra Pradesh State Council of Higher Education
BCA Under CBCS with effect from the academic year 2016-2017 course of study
Total
Marks
Mid Sem
Exam*
Sem End
Exam
Teaching
Hours
Credits
First Language
English
100
25
75
Foundation course - 3
Environmental Sci
50
50
Foundation course 4A
50
50
100
25
75
Adobe In Design
Operating Systems
100
25
75
50
50
Object Oriented
Programming Using C+
+
100
25
75
Object Oriented
Programming Using C+
+ Lab
50
50
50
50
28
24
Total
650
Page 2 of 83
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Andhra Pradesh State Council of Higher Education
BCA Under CBCS with effect from the academic year 2016-2017 course of study
Total
Marks
Mid Sem
Exam*
Sem End
Exam
Teaching
Hours
Credits
First Language
English
100
25
75
Foundation Course - 5
Entrepreneurship
50
50
50
50
100
25
75
4
5
DBMS
100
25
75
DBMS Lab
50
50
100
25
75
JAVA LAB
50
50
Tally Software
50
50
28
24
Total
650
BCA Under CBCS with effect from the academic year 2016-2017 course of study
Page 3 of 83
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Total
Marks
Mid Sem
Exam*
Teaching
Hours
Credits
50
50
50
50
Foundation Course - 7 **
CE (Citizenship Education)
50
50
Foundation course 4B
ICT 2 Dreamweaver
50
50
Unix
100
25
75
100
25
75
50
50
Web Programming
100
25
75
50
50
Unix Lab
50
50
28
23
10
Total
Sno
1
650
Sem End
Exam
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
1(Universitys Choice)
2
Network Security
100
25
75
Software Engineering
100
25
75
OOAD
100
25
75
100
25
75
100
25
75
50
50
50
50
27
22
Elective 1
5.1
5.2
Computer Networks
5.3
Cyber Forensics
Elective 2
6.1
Android Basics
6.2
Principles of Animation
6.3
Software Testing
Methodologies
Elective 1 (LAB)
7.1
Data Mining Lab
7.2
7.3
Elective 2 (Lab)
8.1
Android Basics Lab
8.2
8.3
650
BCA Under CBCS with effect from the academic year 2016-2017 course of study
Course
Skill Development
Course 2
Total
Marks
50
Mid Sem
Exam*
0
Sem End
Exam
50
Teaching
Hours
2
Credits
2
Page 5 of 83
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
(Universitys Choice)
Ecommerce
100
25
75
100
25
75
Cloud Computing
100
25
75
100
25
75
100
50
100
100
29
24
Elective 1
Hadoop & R Language
5.1
5.2
Network programming
5.3
Cyber Laws
Elective 2
6.1
Advanced Android
6.2
6.3
Advanced Software
Testing
Project Lab
Main Project
Total
650
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
UNIT-I
Introduction to computers, characteristics and limitations of computer, Block diagram of
computer, types of computers, uses of computers, computer generations. Number
systems:binary,hexaand octal numbering system
UNIT-II
Input and output devices: Keyboard and mouse,inputting data in other ways, Types of
Software:system software,Application software,commercial,open source,domain and free ware
software , Memories: primary,secondary and cache memory.windows basics: desk top,start
menu,icons.
UNIT III
System Software, Compilers, assemblers, loaders, Operating Systems fundamentals, Introduction
to Algorithms and Programming Languages
UNIT IV
MS Word: Getting Started Working with Microsoft Office 2007. Understanding Word Basics
Editing and Formatting Text. Formatting Documents Working with Graphic Objects
UNIT V
Microsoft Excel: Understanding Excel Basics. Formatting and Editing the Worksheet ,Using
Formulas and Functions. Working with Charts.
Microsoft PowerPoint: Understanding PowerPoint Basics. Formatting and Modifying
Presentations
Enhancing
the
Presentation
REFERENCE BOOK
1. Fundamentals Of Computers by REEMA THAREJA from OXFORD UNIVERSITY
PRESS
2. Microsoft Office 2007 Fundamentals, 1st Edition By Laura Story, Dawna Walls (UNIT I,
UNIT II, UNIT III, UNIT IV)
3.
UNIVERSITY PRESS
4. PC SOFTWARE UNDER WINDOWS by Puneet Kumar And Sushil Bhardwaj From
Kalyani Publishers
Student Activity:
1. Identify the parts of your computer/laptop
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
2. Load trail version of recent MS office suit in your system
3. Prepare your profile in MS PP using animations and sound effects
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
COMPUTER FUNDAMENTALS AND MS OFFICE LAB
1. Prepare your class time table using different Text formattings in a table.
2. Send a Call Letter for All Applicants to Inform Interview Details using Mail Merge
3. Type your mathematical problems in MS word using Mathematical Equation editor
4. Create Water Marking
5. Create Backup file
6. Create a short film with animation and sound effects
7. Create a payslip with details of employee salary
8. Calculate student grades using his internal and external marks details
9. Draw different types of charts for weather analysis of 5 successive years
10. Prepare an excel sheet for posting attendance of students in various subjects and create a
formula for promoting students having 75% minimum attendance
11. Prepare an excel sheet for conducting objective entrance test having multiple choice
answers.
12. Prepare an excel sheet for student details and create formulas for accessing student
addresses, category etc.
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
2. Learn data types and control structures of C
3. Learn to map problems to programming features of C.
4. Learn to write good portable C programs.
Outcomes:
Upon successful completion of the course, a student will be able to:
1. Appreciate and understand the working of a digital computer
2. Analyze a given problem and develop an algorithm to solve the problem
3. Improve upon a solution to a problem
4. Use the 'C' language constructs in the right way
5. Design, develop and test programs written in 'C'
UNIT I
Introduction to Algorithms and Programming Languages: Algorithm Key features of
Algorithms examples of Algorithms Flow Charts Pseudo code Programming Languages
Generation of Programming Languages Structured Programming Language.
Introduction to C: Introduction Structure of C Program Writing the first C Program File
used in C Program Compiling and Executing C Programs Using Comments Keywords
Identifiers Basic Data Types in C Variables Constants I/O Statements in C- Operators in
C- Programming Examples Type Conversion and Type Casting.
UNIT II
Decision Control and Looping Statements: Introduction to Decision Control Statements
Conditional Branching Statements Iterative Statements Nested Loops Break and Continue
Statement Goto Statement.
Functions: Introduction using functions Function declaration/ prototype Function
definition function call return statement Passing parameters Scope of variables Storage
Classes Recursive functions Type of recursion Towers of Hanoi.
UNIT III
Arrays: Introduction Declaration of Arrays Accessing elements of the Array Storing Values
in Array Calculating the length of the Array Operations that can be performed on Array one
dimensional array for inter-function communication Two dimensional Arrays Operations on
Two Dimensional Arrays.
Strings: Introduction - String Operations String and Character functions.
UNIT IV
Pointers: Understanding Computer Memory Introduction to Pointers declaring Pointer
Variables Pointer Expressions and Pointer Arithmetic Null Pointers - Passing Arguments to
Functions using Pointer Pointer and Arrays Passing Array to Function Memory Allocation
in C Programs Memory Usage Dynamic Memory Allocation Drawbacks of Pointers
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Structure, Union, and Enumerated Data Types: Introduction Nested Structures Arrays of
Structures Self referential Structures Union Enumerated Data Types.
UNIT V
Files: Introduction to Files Using Files in C Reading Data from Files Writing Data from
Files Detecting the End-of-file Error Handling during File Operations .
REFERENCE BOOKS
1. Computer Fundamentals and Programming in C by REEMA THAREJA from OXFORD
UNIVERSITY PRESS
2. E Balagurusamy: COMPUTING FUNDAMENTALS & C PROGRAMMING Tata
McGraw-Hill, Second Reprint 2008, ISBN 978-0-07-066909-3.
3. Ashok N Kamthane: Programming with ANSI and Turbo C, Pearson Edition Publ, 2002.
4. 2. Henry Mullish & Huubert L.Cooper: The Sprit of C, Jaico Pub. House,1996.
5. Teach your C Skills-Kanithker
Student Activity:
1. Create time table using faculty workload, subjects etc.
2. Prepare a complete note on recursion and its types
3. Prepare a complete note types of files and file formats for different inputdata
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
7. Write a C program to read student marks in five subjects and calculate the Total, Average and Grade
according to the following conditions:
i. If average >=75 grade is A.
ii. If average >=60 and <75 grade is B.
iii. If average >=50 and <60 grade is C.
iv. Otherwise grade is D.
v. Check that marks in each subject >= 35.
8. Write a C program to find biggest of two numbers using Switch Case.
9. Program to display number of days in given month using Switch -Case.
10. Write a C program to check whether the given number is Prime or Not.
11. Write a program to
i. Check whether given number is Palindrome or Not.
ii. Find the Reverse of a given number.
12. Program to check whether a given number is
i. Strong or Not.
ii. Armstrong or Not.
iii. Perfect or Not.
13. Write a C program to print Fibonacci Series.
14. Write a C Program to print Prime Numbers up to given range.
15. Write a program to print multiplication tables up to given range.
16. Write a C program to perform
i. Matrix Multiplication.
17. Program to display Student Details using Structures.
18. Program to swap two numbers using different parameter passing techniques.
19. Write a C program to
i. Write data into a File.
ii. Read data from a File.
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
4. Passport photo design
5. Pamphlet
6. Broacher designing
7. Titles designing
8. Custom shapes creation
9. Web template design
10.Black & white and color photo conversion
11.Image size modification
12.Wedding album designing
13.Background changes
14.Box package cover designing
15.Texture and patterns designing
16.Filter effects & Eraser effects
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
2. Identify the dead lock situation and provide appropriate solution so that protection and
security of the operating system is also maintained.
3. Analyze memory management techniques, concepts of virtual memory and disk scheduling.
4. Understand the implementation of file systems and directories along with the interfacing of IO
devices with the operating system.
UNIT - I
Operating System Introduction: Operating Systems Objectives and functions, Computer
System Architecture, OS Structure, OS Operations, Evolution of Operating Systems - Simple
Batch, Multi programmed, time shared, Parallel, Distributed Systems, Real-Time Systems,
Operating System services.
UNIT - II
Process and CPU Scheduling - Process concepts - The Process, Process State, Process Control
Block, Threads, Process Scheduling - Scheduling Queues, Schedulers, Context Switch,
Preemptive Scheduling, Dispatcher, Scheduling Criteria, Scheduling algorithms, Case studies:
Linux, Windows.
Process Coordination - Process Synchronization, The Critical section Problem, Synchronization
Hardware, Semaphores, and Classic Problems of Synchronization, Monitors, Case Studies:
Linux, Windows.
UNIT - III
Memory Management and Virtual Memory - Logical & physical Address Space, Swapping,
Contiguous Allocation, Paging, Structure of Page Table. Segmentation, Segmentation with
Paging, Virtual Memory, Demand Paging, Performance of Demanding Paging, Page
Replacement Page Replacement Algorithms, Allocation of Frames.
UNIT - IV
File System Interface - The Concept of a File, Access methods, Directory Structure, File System
Mounting, File Sharing, Protection, File System Structure,
Mass Storage Structure - Overview of Mass Storage Structure, Disk Structure, Disk Attachment,
Disk Scheduling.
UNIT - V
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Deadlocks - System Model, Deadlock Characterization, Methods for Handling Deadlocks,
Deadlock Prevention, Deadlock Avoidance, Deadlock Detection and Recovery from Deadlock.
.
REFERENCES BOOKS:
1. Operating System Principles, Abraham Silberchatz, Peter B. Galvin, Greg Gagne 8th
Edition, Wiley Student Edition.
2. Principles of Operating Systems by Naresh Chauhan, OXFORD University Press
3. Operating systems - Internals and Design Principles, W. Stallings, 6th Edition, Pearson.
4. Modern Operating Systems, Andrew S Tanenbaum 3rd Edition PHI.
5. Operating Systems A concept - based Approach, 2nd Edition, D. M. Dhamdhere, TMH.
6. Principles of Operating Systems, B. L. Stuart, Cengage learning, India Edition.
7. Operating Systems, A. S. Godbole, 2nd Edition, TMH
Student Activity:
1. Load any new operating system into your computer.
2. Partition the memory in your system
3. Create a semaphore for process synchronization
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
4. Implement the Producer Consumer problem using semaphores
5. Implement any two memory management schemes
6. Implement any two file allocation techniques (Linked, Indexed or Contiguous)
7. Implement any two Page Replacement Algorithms
8. Implement Deadlock prevention algorithm.
9. Implement any two disk scanning algorithms
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
4.
5.
6.
7.
UNIT I
Principles of OOP: Software Crisis. Software Evolution- Programming Paradigms. Object
Oriented Technology- Basic concepts and benefits of OOP Application of OOP, OOP languages
Introduction to C++: History of C++, Structure of C++, Application of C++, tokens, keywords,
identifiers, basic data types, derived data types, derived data types, symbolic constant, dynamic
initialization, reference variables, scope resolution operator, type modifiers, type casting
operators and control statements, input and output statements in C++, Function prototyping and
components, Passing parameters: Call by reference, Return by reference, Inline function, Default
arguments, Over loaded function.
UNIT II
Classes and Objects: Class specification, Member function definition nested member
function, access qualifiers, static data members and, member functions. Instance creation - Array
of objects - Dynamic objects - Static Objects Objects as arguments -Returning objects
Constructors and Destructors: Constructors- Parameterized constructors, Overloaded
Constructors, Constructors with default arguments, copy constructors, Destructors.
UNIT III
Operator Overloading: Operator function-overloading unary and binary operators, overloading
the operator using Friend function, Stream operator overloading, Data conversion.
Inheritance: Defining derived classes. Single Inheritance - Protected data with private
inheritance - Multiple Inheritances - Multi Level Inheritance - Hierarchical Inheritance. Hybrid
Inheritance - Multi path Inheritance - Constructors in derived and base Class -Template in
Inheritance - Abstract classes - Virtual function and Dynamic polymorphism. Virtual destructor - Nested Classes
UNIT- IV
Functions in C++ : Virtual functions- need for Virtual function, , Pure Virtual functions,
Generic Programming with Templates. Introduction, function templates, overloaded function
templates, user defined templates arguments, class templates, Inheritance of class templates.
UNIT-V
Files: file stream, file pointer and manipulation, file open and close, sequential and random
access.
Exception Handling: Principle of Exception handling, Exception handling mechanism ,Multiple
catch, Nested try, re throwing the Exception.
REFERENCE BOOKS:
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
1.
1 Object Oriented Programming with C++ by Reema Thareja, OXFORD University Press
2.
The Complete Reference C++, Herb Schildt, Tata McGraw-Hill, Fourth Edition.
3.
Robert Lafore, "Object Oriented Programming in C++", Galgotia Publication Pvt. Ltd,4
th
edition, New Delhi, 2002
4.
Ashok N Kamathane, "Object Oriented Programming with ANSI & Turbo C++", Pearson
Education, New Delhi, 2003.
5.
Bjarne Stroustrup," C++ Programming language", Pearson Education, New Delhi, 2001.
6.
Venugopal K R, Rajkumar Buyya and Ravishankar T," Mastering C++", TMH, ND, 2006
Student Activity:
1. Create a class diagram for academic process in your college
2. Write a program to implement Vikuntapaligame
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
8. Write a C++ program to implement function templates
9. Write a program to implement Overloading and Overriding
10. Write a C++ program to implement the matrix ADT using a class. The operations
supported by this ADT are:
a. Reading a matrix.
b. Printing a matrix
c. Addition of matrices
d. Subtraction of matrices
e. Multiplication of matrices
11. Write C++programs that illustrate how the Single inheritance, Multiple inheritance
Multi level inheritance and Hierarchical inheritance forms of inheritance are
supported
12. Write a C++program that illustrates the order of execution of constructors and
destructors when new class is derived from more than one base class
13. Write a C++ program that illustrates how run time polymorphism is achieved using
virtual functions
Resume designing
Paragraph setting
Text column wise designing
Text base paper add
Create college Logo
Table creation
Student marks list
Book work
Picture insertion
Application form
Text based Visiting card
Notice designing
Typographic alignment styles
Wedding card designing
Letter models
Page 19 of 83
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Page 20 of 83
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Data Models: The importance of Data models, Data Model Basic Building Blocks, Business
Rules, The evaluation of Data Models, Degree of Data Abstraction.
Unit-II
The Relational Database Model: A logical view of Data, Keys, Integrity Rules, Relational Set
Operators, The Data Dictionary and the system catalog, Relationships with in the Relational
Database, Data Redundancy revisited, Indexes, Codds relational database rules.
Entity Relationship Model: The ER Model, Developing ER Diagram,
Unit-III
Normalization of database tables: Database Tables and Normalization, The need for
Normalization, The Normal forms and High level Normal Forms, denormalization.
Unit-IV
Introduction to SQL: Data Definition Commands, Data Manipulation Commands, Select
queries, Advanced Data Definition Commands, Advanced Select queries, Virtual Tables, Joining
Database Tables.
Advanced SQL: Relational Set Operators, SQL Join Operators, Subqueries and correlated
queries, SQL Functions, Oracle Sequences, and Procedural SQL.
Unit-V
Transaction Management and Concurrency Control: What is transaction, Concurrency
control, Concurrency control with locking Methods, Concurrency control with time stamping
methods, concurrency control with optimistic methods, database recovery management.
Reference Books:
1. Peter Rob, Carlos Coronel, Database Systems Design, Implementation and Management,
Seventh Edition, Thomson (2007)
2. Elimasri / Navathe, Fundamentals of Database Systems, Fifth Edition, Pearson Addison
Wesley (2007).
3. Raman A Mata Toledo/Panline K Cushman, Database Management Systems, Schaums
Outlibe series, Tata McGraw Hill (2007).
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
4. C.J.Date, A.Kannan, S.Swamynathan, An Introduction to Database Systems, Eight
Edition, Pearson Education (2006).
5. Atul Kahate, Introduction to Database Management Systems, Pearson Education (2006).
Student Activity:
1. Create student database of your college for placement purpose
2. Create student database of your college for fees reimbursement, ADHAAR as primary key
zip
code.
2. Get part numbers for parts that have been ordered by at least two
different customers.
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
3. For each odetail row, get ono,pno,pname,qty and price values along with
for the item. (total price=price*qty)
4. Get customer name and employee pairs such that the customer with name has placed an
order through the employee
5. Get customer names living in fort dodge or liberal.
6. Get cname values of customers who have ordered a product with
pno 10506.
An enterprise wishes to maintain the details about his suppliers and other corresponding details.
For that it uses the following tables
Table s(sid,sname,address)
primary key
: sid
Table p(pid,pname,color)
primary key
: pid
Table cat(sid,pid,cost)
primary key
: sid+pid
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
reference key : sid references s.sid
pid references p.pid
Solve the following queries
1. Find the pnames of parts for which there is some supplier
2. Find the snames of suppliers who supply every part.
3. Find the snames of suppliers who suppy every red part.
4. Find the pnames of parts supllied by london supplier and by no
one else
5. Find the sids of suppliers who charge more for some part other than the average cost of
that part
6. Using group by with having clause get the part numbers for all the parts supplied by more
than one supplier.
7. Get the names of the suppliers, who do not supply part p2.
8. Find the sids of suppliers who supply a red and a green part
9. Find the sids of suppliers who supply a red or a green part
10.find the total amount has to pay for that supplier by part
located from london
3.Employee database
An enterprise wishes to maintain a database to automate its operations. Enterprise divided into to
certain departments and each department consists of employees. The following two tables
describes the automation schemas
Dept (deptno, dname, loc)
Emp (empno,ename,job,mgr,hiredate,sal,comm,deptno)
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
1. Create a view, which contain employee names and their manager names working in sales
department.
2. Determine the names of employee, who earn more than their managers.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
Determine the names of employees, who take highest salary in their departments.
Determine the employees, who located at the same place.
Determine the employees, whose total salary is like the minimum salary
of any department.
Update the employee salary by 25%, whose experience is greater than 10 years.
Delete the employees, who completed 32 years of service.
Determine the minimum salary of an employee and his details, who join on the same
date.
10. Determine the count of employees, who are taking commission and not taking
Commission.
4.Pl/sql programs
1. Write a pl/sql program to check the given number is strong or not.
2. Write a pl/sql program to check the given string is palindrome or not.
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
3. Write a pl/sql program to swap two numbers without using third variable.
4. Write a pl/sql program to generate multiplication tables for 2,4,6
5. Write a pl/sql program to display sum of even numbers and sum of odd
numbers in the given range.
6. Write a pl/sql program to check the given number is pollinndrome or not.
7. write a pl/sql procedure to prepare an electricity bill by using
following table
table used: elect
name
mno
null? Type
not null number(3)
cname
varchar2(20)
cur_read
number(5)
prev_read
number(5)
no_units
number(5)
amount
number(8,2)
ser_tax
net_amt
number(8,2)
number(9,2)
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
4.
5.
Develop the ability to solve real-world problems through software development in highlevel programming language like Java
6.
7.
Become familiar with the fundamentals and acquire programming skills in the Java
language.
UNIT-1
FUNDAMENTALS OF OBJECT ORIENTED PROGRAMMING :Introduction, Object
Oriented paradigm, Basic Concepts of OOP, Benefits of OOP, Applications of OOP , Java features:
OVERVIEW OF JAVA LANGUAGE: Introduction, Simple Java program structure, Java tokens,
Java Statements, Implementing a Java Program, Java Virtual Machine, Command line
arguments. CONSTANTS, VARIABLES & DATA TYPES: Introduction, Constants, Variables,
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Data Types, Declaration of Variables, Giving Value to Variables, Scope of variables, Symbolic
Constants, Type casting, Getting Value of Variables, Standard Default values; OPERATORS &
EXPRESSIONS.
UNIT-II
DECISION MAKING & BRANCHING: Introduction, Decision making with if statement,
Simple if statement, if. Else statement, Nesting of if. else statements, the else if ladder, the
switch statement, the conditional operator. LOOPING: Introduction, The While statement, the
do-while statement, the for statement, Jumps in loops.
CLASSES, OBJECTS & METHODS: Introduction, Defining a class, Adding variables,
Adding methods, Creating objects, Accessing class members, Constructors, Method overloading,
Static members, Nesting of methods;
UNIT-III
INHERITANCE: Extending a class, Overloading methods, Final variables and methods, Final
classes, Abstract methods and classes;
ARRAYS, STRINGS AND VECTORS: Arrays, One-dimensional arrays, Creating an array,
Two dimensional arrays, Strings, Vectors, Wrapper classes;
INTERFACES: MULTIPLE INHERITANCE: Introduction, Defining interfaces, Extending
interfaces, Implementing interfaces, Assessing interface variables;
UNIT-IV
MULTITHREADED PROGRAMMING: Introduction, Creating Threads, Extending the
Threads, Stopping and Blocking a Thread, Lifecycle of a Thread, Using Thread Methods, Thread
Exceptions, Thread Priority, Synchronization, Implementing the Runnable Interface.
MANAGING ERRORS AND EXCEPTIONS: Types of errors : Compile-time errors, Runtime errors, Exceptions, Exception handling, Multiple Catch Statements, Using finally statement,
UNIT-V
APPLET PROGRAMMING: local and remote applets, Applets and Applications, Building
Applet code, Applet Life cycle: Initialization state, Running state, Idle or stopped state, Dead
state, Display state.
PACKAGES: Introduction, Java API Packages, Using System Packages, Naming conventions,
Creating Packages, Accessing a Package, using a Package.
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
MANAGING INPUT/OUTPUT FILES IN JAVA: Introduction, Concept of Streams, Stream
classes, Byte Stream Classes, Input Stream Classes, Output Stream Classes, Character Stream
classes: Reader stream classes, Writer Stream classes, Using Streams, Reading and writing files.
Reference Books:
1. E.Balaguruswamy, Programming with JAVA, A primer, 3e, TATA McGraw-Hill
Company.
2. Programming in Java by Sachin Malhotra, OXFORD University Press
3. John R. Hubbard, Programming with Java, Second Edition, Schaums outline Series, TATA
McGraw-Hill Company.
4. Deitel &Deitel. Java TM: How to Program, PHI (2007)
5. Java Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design- D.S Mallik
6. Object Oriented Programming Through Java by P. Radha Krishna, Universities Press (2008)
Student Activity:
1. Create a front end using JAVA for the student database created
2. Learn the difference between ODBC and JDBC
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
OBJECT ORIENTED PROGRAMMING USING JAVA LAB
1. Java program to demonstrate the use of Harmonic Series.
2. Java program to display a number of even, odd and sum of even, odd program.
3. Java program to find a sub string in the given string.
4. Java program to arrange the given strings in Alphabetic Order.
5. Java program to implements Addition and multiplication of two Matrices.
6. Java program to demonstrate the use of Constructor.
7. Java program to display a use of method overloading.
8. Java program to demonstrate the use of overriding Method.
9. Java program for single Inheritance.
10. Java program for implementing Interface.
11. Java program on Multiple Inheritance.
12. Java program for to implement Thread, Thread Priority,
13. Java program to demonstrate Exception handling.
14. Java program to demonstrate Applet program.
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
TALLY LAB
2) Create the above records for any organization and get certified by them with comments
Page 31 of 83
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
BCA II Year IV Semester
UNIX
Course Objectives
1. To understand Unix Operating System
2. To explore the Basic Shell Commands
Course Outcomes
After this course, the student will be able to
1. Implement and innovate commands using the basic tool kit.
2. Develop shell programs in vi/vim editor
Unit I
UNIX OPERATING SYSTEM
Overview of UNIX Operating System, basic features of Unix operating System, File Structure,
CPU Scheduling, Memory Management, File System Implementation of Operating System
Functions in UNIX.
Unit II
Starting Of Unix and Text Manipulation and user-to-user communication User Names and
Groups, Logging In, Format of Unix Commands, Changing your password, Unix
Documentation,
Unit III
Files and Directories: , File permission, Basic Operation on Files, Changing Permission Modes,
Standard files , Processes Inspecting Files, Operating On Files, Printing Files, Rearranging Files,
Sorting Files, Splitting Files, Translating Characters, On line communication, Off line
communication.
Unit IV
VI EDITORS
General characteristics, Adding text and Navigation, changing text, searching for text, copying
and Moving text, Features of Ex, Line Editors Ex and Ed, Stream editor SED, changing several
file s in SED, AWK.
Unit V
Shell Programming:
Programming in the Bourne and C-Shell, Wild Cards, Simple Shell program, variables,
Programming Construct, Interactive Shell scripts, Advanced Features, Unix Compiler,
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Maintaining program System Administration Define system Administration, Booting the system,
Maintaining User Accounts, File System, and special files, Backup and Restoration.
References Books:
1. Unix and shell Programming by B.M Harwani, OXFORD University Press
2. Unix Concept and application- Sumitabhadas
3. Unix Shell Programming-Yashwant Kanetkar
4. Unix Programming Environment- RobPike
5. Unix in a Nutshell- Donill Gily
Student Activity:
1. Load unix/linux in your system in a separate drive
2. Create graphics in unix environment
Page 33 of 83
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Unix Lab
1. Execute of various file/directory handling commands.
2. Write a Simple shell script for basic arithmetic and logical calculations.
3. Write Shell scripts to check various attributes of files and directories.
4. Write Shell scripts to perform various operations on give n strings.
5. Write Shell scripts to explore system variables such as PATH, HOME etc.
6. Write Shell scripts to check and list attributes of processes.
7.Execute various system administrative commands
8.Write awk script that uses all of its features.
9.Use seed instruction to process /etc/password file.
10.Write a shell script to display list of users currently logged in.
11.Write a shell script to delete all the temporary files.
12.Write a shell script to search an element from an array using binary searching.
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Course Objectives
To introduce the fundamental concept of data structures and to emphasize the importance of data
structures in developing and implementing efficient algorithms. In addition, another objective of
the course is to develop effective software engineering practice, emphasizing such principles as
decomposition, procedural abstraction, and software reuse.
Course Outcomes
After completing this course satisfactorily, a student will be able to:
1. Describe how arrays, records, linked structures, stacks, queues, trees, and graphs are
represented in memory and used by algorithms.
2. Describe common applications for arrays, records, linked structures, stacks, queues, trees,
and graphs.
3. Write programs that use arrays, records, linked structures, stacks, queues, trees, and
graphs
4. Demonstrate different methods for traversing trees
5. Compare alternative implementations of data structures with respect to performance
6. Compare and contrast the benefits of dynamic and static data structures implementations
7. Describe the concept of recursion, give examples of its use, describe how it can be
implemented using a stack .
8. Discuss the computational efficiency of the principal algorithms for sorting, searching,
and hashing.
UNIT I
Concept of Abstract Data Types (ADTs)- Data Types, Data Structures, Storage Structures, and
File Structures, Primitive and Non-primitive Data Structures, Linear and
Non-linear
Structures.
Linear Lists - ADT, Array and Linked representations (Single and Double Linked lists),
Pointers.
UNIT II
Stacks: Definition, ADT, Array and Linked representations, Implementations and Applications.
Queues: Definition, ADT, Array and Linked representations, Circular Queues, Dequeues,
Priority Queues and Applications.
UNIT III
Trees: Binary Tree, Definition, Properties, ADT, Array and Linked representations,
Implementations and Applications, Heaps Trees and Applications,
Binary Search Trees (BST) - Definition, ADT, Operations and Implementations, BST with
Duplicates and Applications.
.
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
UNIT IV
Graphs Graph and its Representation, Graph Traversals, Connected Components, Basic
Searching Techniques, Minimal Spanning Trees.
UNIT- V
Sorting and Searching: Selection, Insertion, Bubble, Merge, Quick, Sequential and Binary
Searching.
REFERENCE BOOKS
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Student Activity:
1. Create Visual Stack using graphics in JAVA
2. Create Visual Queue using graphics in JAVA
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Course Objective
Page 37 of 83
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
To provide knowledge on web architecture, web services, client side and server side
scripting technologies to focus on the development of web-based information systems
and web services.
To provide skills to design interactive and dynamic web sites.
Course Outcome
To understand the web architecture and web services.
To practice latest web technologies and tools by conducting experiments.
To design interactive web pages using HTML and Style sheets.
To study the framework and building blocks of .NET Integrated Development
Environment.
5. To provide solutions by identifying and formulating IT related problems.
1.
2.
3.
4.
UNIT I
DNS E-mail FTP TFTP History of WWW Basics of WWW and Browsing - Local
information on the internet HTML Web Browser Architecture Web Pages and Multimedia
Remote Login (TELNET).
UNIT II
Introduction to Web Technology: Web pages Tiers Concept of a Tier Comparison of
Microsoft and Java Technologies Web Pages Static Web Pages Plug-ins Frames Forms.
Dynamic Web Pages: Need Magic of Dynamic Web Pages Overview of Dynamic Web Page
Technologies Overview of DHTML Common Gateway Interface.
UNIT III
ASP ASP Technology ASP Example Modern Trends in ASP Java and JVM Java
Servlets Java Server Pages.
Active Web Pages: Active Web Pages in better solution Java Applets Why are Active Web
Pages Powerful? Lifecycle of Java Applets ActiveX Controls Java Beans. Middleware and
Component-Based E-Commerce Architectures
UNIT IV
CORBA Java Remote Method Invocation DCOM. EDI: Overview Origins of EDI
Understanding of EDI Data Exchange Standards EDI Architecture Significance of EDI
Financial EDI EDI and internet.
UNIT V
Page 38 of 83
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
XML: SGML Basics of XML XML Parsers Need for a standard. WAP: Limitations of
Mobile devices Emergence of WAP WAP Architecture WAP Stack Concerns about WAP
and its future Alternatives to WAP.
REFERENCE BOOK
1. WEB TECHNOLOGIES TCP/IP to Internet Applications Architectures Achyut S Godbole
& Atul Kahate, 2007, TMH.
2. Web Technologies by Uttam Kumar Roy, Oxforn University Press
3. INTERNET AND WEB TECHNOLOGIES Rajkamal, TMH.
4. TCP/IP PROTOCOL SUITE Behrouz A. Forouzan, 3rd edition, TMH
Student Activity:
1. Design a website for your college
2. Design your personal web site
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
3. Create a web page, which contains hyper links like fruits, flowers, animals. When you click
on hyper links, it must take you to related web page; these web pages must contain with
related images.
4. Create a hyperlink to move around within a single page rather than to load another page.
5. Create a leave letter using different text formatting tags.
6. Create a table format given bellow using row span and colspan.
MARKS
RNO
NAME
M1
M2
M3
M4 M5
Insert 5 records.
7. Create a table with different formats as given bellow.
i.
Give different background and font colors to table header, footer and body.
ii.
Use table caption tag.
8. Divide a web page vertically and horizontally with scroll bars, name them as shown bellow
decorate it with some items.
F2
F1
F3
9. Create a student Bio-Data, using forms.
10. Create a web page using following style sheets
i. Inline style sheets.
ii. Embedded style sheets.
iii. External style sheets
11. Write a JavaScript program to accept two values from form and apply any 5 mathematical
functions
Write student database with XML
2.
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
UNIT I
INTRODUCTION:OSI Security Architecture - Classical Encryption techniques - Cipher
Principles - Data Encryption Standard - Block Cipher Design Principles and Modes of Operation.
UNIT - II
PUBLIC KEY CRYPTOGRAPHY:Key Management - Diffie-Hellman key Exchange - Elliptic
Curve Architecture and Cryptography - Introduction to Number Theory - Confidentiality using
Symmetric Encryption - Public Key Cryptography and RSA.
UNIT III
AUTHENTICATION AND HASH FUNCTION :Authentication requirements Authentication functions - Message Authentication Codes - Hash Functions - Security of Hash
Functions and MACs - MD5 message Digest algorithm - Secure Hash Algorithm - RIPEMD HMAC Digital Signatures - Authentication Protocols - Digital Signature Standard
UNIT - IV
NETWORK SECURITY : Authentication Applications: Kerberos - X.509 Authentication
Service - Electronic Mail Security - PGP - S/MIME - IP Security - Web Security.
UNIT V
SYSTEM LEVEL SECURITY: Intrusion detection - password management - Viruses and
related Threats - Virus Counter measures - Firewall Design Principles - Trusted Systems.
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
REFERENCES
1. William Stallings, "Cryptography And Network Security - Principles and Practices", Prentice
Hall of India, Third Edition, 2003.
2. Atul Kahate, "Cryptography and Network Security", Tata McGraw-Hill, 2003.
3. Bruce Schneier, "Applied Cryptography", John Wiley & Sons Inc, 2001.
4. Charles B. Pfleeger, Shari Lawrence Pfleeger, "Security in Computing", Third Edition,
Pearson Education, 2003.
Student Activity:
1. Create password verification using images
2. Create password verification using multimedia
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
The Objective of the course is to assist the student in understanding the basic theory of software
engineering, and to apply these basic theoretical principles to a group software development
project.
Course outcomes
1. Ability to gather and specify requirements of the software projects.
2. Ability to analyze software requirements with existing tools
3. Able to differentiate different testing methodologies
4. Able to understand and apply the basic project management practices in real life projects
5. Ability to work in a team as well as independently on software projects
UNIT I
INTRODUCTION:Software Engineering Process paradigms - Project management - Process
and Project Metrics software estimation - Empirical estimation models - Planning - Risk
analysis - Software project scheduling.
UNIT II
REQUIREMENTS ANALYSIS :Requirement Engineering Processes Feasibility Study
Problem of Requirements Software Requirement Analysis Analysis Concepts and Principles
Analysis Process Analysis Model
UNIT III
SOFTWARE DESIGN:Software design - Abstraction - Modularity - Software Architecture Effective modular design - Cohesion and Coupling - Architectural design and Procedural design Data flow oriented design.
UNIT IV
USER INTERFACE DESIGN AND REAL TIME SYSTEMS :User interface design - Human
factors - Human computer interaction - Human - Computer Interface design - Interface design Interface standards.
UNIT V
SOFTWARE QUALITY AND TESTING :Software Quality Assurance - Quality metrics Software Reliability - Software testing - Path testing Control Structures testing - Black Box
testing - Integration, Validation and system testing - Reverse Engineering and Re-engineering.
CASE tools projects management, tools - analysis and design tools programming tools integration and testing tool - Case studies.
REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Roger Pressman S., Software Engineering: A Practitioner's Approach, 7th
Edition, McGraw Hill, 2010.
2.Software Engineering Principles and Practice by Deepak jain, Oxford University Press
3.Sommerville, Software Engineering, Eighth Edition, Pearson Education, 2007
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
4.Pfleeger, Software Engineering-Theory & Practice, 3rd Edition, Pearson
Education, 2009
5. Carlo Ghazi, Mehdi Jazayari, Dino Mandrioli, Fundamentals of Software
Engineering, Pearson Education, 2003
Student Activity:
1.Develop requirement analysis report to develop software for any financial organization
2. Develop risk analysis report for any organization using software for its day to day transactions
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Course Objective
Course Outcome
To describe the three pillars of object-orientation methodologies and explain the benefits
of each .
To create use case documents that capture requirements for a software system.
To create class diagrams that model both the domain model and design model
of a software system.
To describe how design patterns facilitate development and list several of the
most popular patterns.
UNIT I
Introduction to OOAD What is OOAD? What is UML? What are the United process(UP)
phases - Case study the NextGen POS system, Inception -Use case Modeling - Relating Use
cases include, extend and generalization.
UNIT II
Elaboration - Domain Models - Finding conceptual classes and description classes Associations
Attributes Domain model refinement Finding conceptual class hierarchies- Aggregation and
Composition- UML activity diagrams and modeling
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
UNIT III
System sequence diagrams - Relationship between sequence diagrams and use cases Logical
architecture and UML package diagram Logical architecture refinement - UML class diagrams
- UML interaction diagrams
UNIT IV
GRASP: Designing objects with responsibilities Creator Information expert Low Coupling
Controller High Cohesion Designing for visibility - Applying GoF design patterns adapter,
singleton, factory and observer patterns.
UNIT V
UML state diagrams and modeling - Operation contracts- Mapping design to code -UML
deployment and component diagrams
REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Object Oriented Analysis and Design By Grady Booch.
2. Craig Larman,"Applying UML and Patterns: An Introduction to object-oriented Analysis and
Design and iterative development, Third Edition, Pearson Education, 2005
3. Mike ODocherty, Object-Oriented Analysis & Design: Understanding System Development
with UML 2.0, John Wiley & Sons, 2005.
4. James W- Cooper, Addison-Wesley, Java Design Patterns A Tutorial, 2000.
5. Micheal Blaha, James Rambaugh, Object-Oriented Modeling and Design with UML,
Second Edition, Prentice Hall of India Private Limited, 2007
6. Erich Gamma, Richard Helm, Ralph Johnson, John Vlissides,Design patterns: Elements of
Reusable object-oriented software, Addison-Wesley, 1995.
Student Activity:
1. Develop a class diagram for the flight services available in your near by air port
2. Develop a sequence diagram of activities of any automated device
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Page 47 of 83
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Cluster Analysis: Basic concepts, clustering structures, major clustering approaches, partitioning
methods, hierarchical methods, density based methods, the expectation maximization method,
cluster based outlier detection Essential Reading.
References:
1. 1.Data Mining by Vikram Pudi, P.Radha Krishna, Oxford Universith Press
2. Data Warehousing by Reema Thareja , Oxford University Press
3. 1.J. Han , M. Kamber and J. Pei , Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques , 3rd.edMorgan
Kaufmann, 2011
4. Introduction to data mining G.K.Gupta, PHI
5. 3.Data mining, Data warehouse & Olap-Berson, Tata McGraw Hill
Student Activity:
1.Predict the course taken by a student based on his activities and way of learning
2. Learn visual patterns of any real time data
Page 48 of 83
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
1. To provide an introduction to the fundamental concepts on data communication and the design
of computer networks.
2. To get familiarized with the basic protocols of computer networks.
Course Outcomes
After this course, the student will be able to
1. Identify the different components in a Communication System and their respective roles.
2. Describe the technical issues related to the local Area Networks
3. Identify the common technologies available in establishing LAN infrastructure.
UNIT I
Network architecture layers Physical links Channel access on links Hybrid multiple
access techniques - Issues in the data link layer - Framing Error correction and detection
Link-level Flow Control.
UNIT II
Medium access CSMA Ethernet Token ring FDDI - Wireless LAN Bridges and witches
UNIT III
Circuit switching vs. packet switching / Packet switched networks IP ARP RARP DHCP
ICMP Queueing discipline Routing algorithms RIP OSPF Subnetting CIDR
Interdomain routing BGP Ipv6 Multicasting Congestion avoidance in network layer
UNIT IV
UDP TCP Adaptive Flow Control Adaptive Retransmission - Congestion control
Congestion avoidance QoS
UNIT V
Email (SMTP, MIME, IMAP, POP3) HTTP DNS- SNMP Telnet FTP Security
PGP - SSH
REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Andrew S. Tanenbaum, Computer Networks, Fourth Edition, 2003
2. Computer Networks by Bhushan Trivedi,Oxford University Press
3. James F. Kuross, Keith W. Ross, Computer Networking, A Top-Down Approach
Page 50 of 83
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Featuring the Internet, Third Edition, Addison Wesley, 2004.
4.Nader F. Mir, Computer and Communication Networks, Pearson Education, 2007
5.Comer, Computer Networks and Internets with Internet Applications, Fourth Edition,
Pearson Education, 2003.
6. William Stallings, Data and Computer Communication, Sixth Edition, Pearson
vi, 2000
Student Activity:
1. Learn the functioning of various network devices used in your college network
2. Compare 2G,3G,4G and 5G networks
3. Prepare LAN deployment diagram of your organization
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
3 Write a code simulating ARP /RARP protocols.
4. Write a code simulating PING and TRACEROUTE commands
5. Create a socket for HTTP for web page upload and download.
6. Write a program to implement RPC (Remote Procedure Call).
7. Implementation of Subnetting.
8. Applications using TCP Sockets like
a. Echo client and echo server b. Chat
C. File Transfer
9. Applications using TCP and UDP Sockets like DNS, SNMP and File Transfer.
10. Study of Network simulator (NS).and Simulation of Congestion
Control Algorithms using NS
11. Perform a case study about the different routing algorithms to select the network path with its
optimum and economical during data transfer.
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Course Outcomes
1.
2.
understand the role of computer forensics in the business and private world
identify some of the current techniques and tools for forensic examinations
3.
describe and identify basic principles of good professional practice for a forensic
computing practitioner
4.
Unit I
Introduction to Computer Forensics : Computer forensics definitions ,Computers' roles in
crimes ,Computer forensics tasks ,Prepare for an investigation, Collect evidence ,Preserve
evidence ,Recover evidence, Document evidence Challenges associated with making
"cybercrime" laws, Jurisdictional issues.
Unit II
Computer Crimes :Crimes ,Violent crimes where computers are used include terrorism, assault
threat, stalking, child pornography ,Nonviolent crimes where computers are used include
trespass, theft, fraud, vandalism , Where evidence often resides for different types of crimes
,Address books, chat logs, e-mail, images, movies, Internet browser history, etc.
Unit III
Computer Criminals: Using evidence to create a crime timeline , Modify Access Create (MAC)
dates associated with files ,Problems with using these (they don't change in a logical fashion in
some cases) ,Criminals and crime fighters ,Understanding "cyber criminals" and their victims
,Understanding "cyber investigators.
Unit IV
Building a Cybercrime Case: Bodies of law ,Constitutional law ,Criminal law ,Civil law
,Administrative regulations ,Levels of law ,Local laws ,State laws ,Federal laws ,International
laws ,Levels of culpability ,Intent ,Knowledge ,Recklessness ,Negligence , Level and burden of
proof ,Criminal versus civil cases ,Vicarious liability ,Laws related to computers ,CFAA,
DMCA, CAN Spam, etc.
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Unit V
Preserving and Recovering Digital Evidence: Disk imaging ,Creating a message digest or hash
code for a disk ,Where data hides; deleted and erased data ,File systems ,Files ,Modify Access
Create (MAC) dates to establish time line ,File headers - info about file type
References books
1.
Guide to Computer Forensics and Investigations ,By Bill Nelson, Amelia Phillips,
christopher Steuart
2.
3. John R. Vacca, Computer Forensics: Computer Crime Scene Investigation, 2nd Edition, Charles
River Media, 2005
4. Christof Paar, Jan Pelzl, Understanding Cryptography: A Textbook for Students and Practitioners, 2
nd Edition, Springers, 2010
5 . Ali Jahangiri, Live Hacking: The Ultimate Guide to Hacking Techniques & Countermeasures for
Ethical Hackers & IT Security Experts, Ali Jahangiri, 2009
6. Computer Forensics: Investigating Network Intrusions and Cyber Crime (Ec-Council Press Series:
Computer Forensics), 2010
Student Activity:
1. Collect calls made from a cell tower and analyze them
2. Trace the IP address of the machine from which you received a email
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
1) Use of disk tools to analyze the tool displays the total number of sectors and the useraccessible sectors.
2) Use of volume system tools to analyze the disk volume and partitions , whether they are
allocated properly or not
3) File system tools to analyze the file system , its type and its description
4) Content category tool to analyze the data in the directory
5) Meta data category tool to analyze the data that describes a file
6) File name category tool to analyze The file name category of data includes the data that
associates a name with a metadata entry.
7)
Multiple category tool to analyze that combine the data from the various categories to
produce the data sorted in a different order
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Android Basics
Course Objectives:
1. Describe the platforms upon which the Android operating system will run.
2. Create a simple application that runs under the Android operating system.
3. Access and work with the Android file system.
4. Create an application that uses multimedia under the Android operating system.
5. Access and work with databases under the Android operating system.
Course Outcomes
After completion of this course students should make Android apps for Android devices.Students
will be able to write simple GUI applications, use built-in widgets and components, work with
the database to store data locally, and much more.
UNIT-I
What is Android, Android Tools, Your First Android Application, Anatomy of Android Application,
Workspaces, Editors in Eclipse, Eclipse Perspective, Refactoring
UNIT-II
Creating Android Emulator, Creating Snapshot, SD Card Emulation, Sending SMS Messages to the
Emulator , Transferring Files into and out of the Emulator ,Resetting the Emulator
UNIT-III
Activity, Linking Activity using Intent, Fragments, Calling Build-In Application using Intent,
Notifications
UNIT-IV
Components of a Screen, Display Orientation, Action Bar, Listening for User Inter
UNIT-V
Basic Views, Picker Views, List View, Specialized Fragment, Gallery and Image View, Image Switcher,
Grid View, Options Menu, Context Menu, Clock View, Web view
Reference Books:
Page 56 of 83
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
1.Android Programming: The Big Nerd Ranch Guide (Big Nerd Ranch Guides) By: Bill
Philips & Brian Hardy
2.Android Design Patterns: Interaction design solutions for developers by Greg Nudelman
3.Android User Interface Design: Turning Ideas and Sketches into Beautifully Designed Apps
By: Ian G. Clifton
4. Android Recipes: A Problem-Solution Approach By: Dave Smith & Jeff Friesen
5. Hello, Android: Introducing Google's Mobile Development Platform (Pragmatic
Programmers) By: Ed Burnette
Student Activity:
1. Create a mobile APP for your college
2. Create a mobile APP for any rural application
Page 57 of 83
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Android basics lab
Exercise 1
Exercise 2
Creating Applications with Multiple Activities and a Simple Menu using ListView
Exercise 3
Exercise 4
Exercise 5
Exercise 6
Exercise 7
Exercise 8
Exercise 9
Exercise 10
Simulating Sensors
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Course Objectives
Students can expect to learn basic principles and relevant techniques for comprehending the
underlying
Course Outcome
UNIT-I
What is Animation: Its definition, early examples of Animation. History of Animation: Stop
Motion Photo Animation, Zoetrope, Thaumatrope, Cell and Paper Animation, early Disneys
Cell Animation Processes
UNIT-II
Types of Animation: Cell Animation, Stop Motion Animation, Computer Animation, 2-D
Animation, 3-D Animation. Skills for an Animation Artist: Visual and creative development of an
Artist , importance of observation with minute details, efficiency to draw gestures, facial
expressions, good listener, hard work and patience, creative and innovative.
UNIT-III
Basic Principles of Animation: Illusion of Life, straight action and pose to pose Timing,
Exaggeration, Drama and Psychological Effect, Fade in and Fade out, Squash and Stretch,
Anticipation, staging, follow through and overlapping action, Arcs, Solid Drawing ,Appeal, slow
in and slow out, Secondary Action.
UNIT-IV
Various Terms: Animation Drawings/Cels, Rough Drawings , Clean ups, Color reference
drawings, Layout, Model Sheet, Key Drawings and in Betweens, Master Background, Concept
Piece, Character drawing , Story Board.
References:
1.The complete animation course by Chris Patmore -Barons Educational Series.(New York)
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
2. Animation Unleashed by Ellen Bessen, Michael Weise Productions,2008(U.S.A)
3.The Animators Survival Kit by Richard Williams, Arrar Straus & Giroux Pub.(U.S.A
Student Activity:
1. Develop a simple animated short film
2. Develop a simple animated short film with back ground music
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
ADVANCED 2D ANIMATION
1: Action scripting
Using actions to control a timeline - Using frame labels - Creating button symbols - Creating
animated buttons using movie clips Movie Clip Controls Browser / network.
2: Advanced Animation Methods
Creating movies playing within movies (movie clips and .swf) - Controlling multiple
timelines (movies) through action scripting - Critique storyboards.
3: Streamlining Files for Use on the Web, Publishing Files to the Internet & Pre loaders
Pre loaders - Controlling sound with script - Exploring types of output - Work on final
project in class - Importing video - Publishing demo (video) reels on web - Publishing and
exporting files - Trouble shooting sites.
The Illusion of Life: Disney Animation by Frank Thomas, Ollie Johnston (Contributor),
Collie Johnston.
Adobe Flash CS3
The Animator's Survival Kit: A Manual of Methods, Principles, and Formulas for
Classical, Computer, Games, Stop Motion, and Internet Animators by Richard
Williams
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Course Objectives
The Objective of this course is to enable a clear understanding and knowledge of the
foundations, techniques, and tools in the area of software testing and its practice in the industry.
The course will prepare students to be leaders in software testing. Whether you are a developer
or a tester, you must test software. We can learn strengths and weaknesses of a variety of
software testing techniques.
Course Outcomes
After completion of this course the student will be able to plan, develop, and execute an
automated test plan.
UNIT-I
Introduction: Purpose of testing, Dichotomies, model for testing, consequences of bugs, taxonomy of
Bugs.
Flow Graphs and Path testing:
UNIT-III
Domain Testing: domains and paths, Nice & ugly domains, domain testing domains and interfaces
Testing, domain and interface testing, domains and testability.
UNIT-IV
Paths, Path products and Regular Expressions: Path products & path expression, reduction procedure,
Applications, regular expressions & flow anomaly detection.
Logic Based Testing: Overview, decision tables, path expressions kv charts, specifications.
UNIT-V
State, State Graphs and Transition testing: State graphs, good & bad state graphs state testing,
Testability tips.
Graph Matrices and Application:
matrix, Node reduction algorithm, building tools. (Student should be given an exposure to a tool like J
Meter or Win runner.)
Reference Books
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1. Software Testing techniques Baris Beizerm Dreamtech, Second edition.
2. Software Testing Tools Dr. K.V.K.K. Prasad, Dreamtech.
3. Software Testing Principles and Practices by Naresh Chauhan, Oxford University Press
3. The craft of software testing Brain Matrick, Pearson Education.
4. Software Testing Techniques SPD (Oreille)
5. Software Testing in the Real World-Edward Kit, Pearson.
6. Effective methods of Software Testing, Peery, John Wiley.
7. Art of Software Testing Meyers, John Wiley.
Student Activity:
1. Prepare a chart for guidelines for data security in your organization
2.Test the performance of any software that is used by your organization under maximum load
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Overview of Electronic Commerce: Main Activities of E-Commerce, Broad Goals of ECommerce, E-Commerce technical Components, Functions of E-Commerce, Prospectus of Ecommerce, Lessons from E-commerce Evolution, Scope of E-commerce.
Unit-II
E-commerce Technical Architecture, E- Commerce Strategies, E-commerce Essentials, Ecommerce applications, Foundation of E-commerce, Growth of E-Commerce, Advantages of ECommerce, Disadvantages of E-commerce, progress of E-commerce in India.
Unit-III
Driving the E-commerce Revolution. E-commerce Activities, Matrix of E-commerce models,
B2C, B2B, B2B Boom, E-commerce opportunity Frame work, Developing an E-commerce
Strategy, International E-commerce, International Strategy Development, Dotcom Companies.
Unit-IV
Electronic Market:-Online Shopping, Online Purchasing, Electronic Market, Three models of
Electronic Market, Markets category, International Marketing, one-to one Marketing,
Permission Marketing, pull and push technologies, B2B Hubs, B2B market places, B2B
exchange.
Unit-V
Electronic Business: Electronic Business applications Emerging applications, Electronic
Business Architecture, AMR Model for Electronic Business, Evolution of Electronic Business
Application, Dotcom companies, The Indian scenario for E-Business, electronic business
implementations, B2B E-commerce, B2C E-commerce, B2B Market Place..
References:
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Course Outcomes
Ability to install and run open-source operating systems. Ability to gather information about Free
and Open Source Software projects from software releases and from sites on the internet. Ability
to build and modify one or more Free and Open Source Software packages. Ability to use a
version control system and to interface with version control systems used by development
communities. Ability to contribute software to and interact with Free and Open Source Software
development projects.
UNIT-I
Introduction to Open sources Need of Open Sources Advantages of Open Sources
Application of Open Sources.
UNIT-II
Open source operating systems: LINUX: Introduction General Overview Kernel Mode and
user mode. Process Advanced Concepts Scheduling Personalities Cloning Signals
UNIT-III
OPEN SOURCE DATABASE: MySQL: Introduction Setting up account Starting,
terminating and writing your own SQL programs Record selection Technology Working with
strings Date and Time Sorting Query Results
UNIT-IV
OPEN SOURCE PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES : PHP: Introduction Programming in web
environment variables constants data types operators Statements Functions Arrays
OOP String Manipulation and regular expression.
UNIT-V
PERL : Perl backgrounder Perl overview Perl parsing rules Variables and Data
Statements and Control structures Subroutines, Packages, and Modules- Working with Files
Data Manipulation.
REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Rasmus Lerdorf and Levin Tatroe, Programming PHP, OReilly, 2002
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2. Wesley J. Chun, Core Phython Programming, Prentice Hall, 2001
3. Martin C. Brown, Perl: The Complete Reference, 2nd Edition, Tata McGrawHill Publishing
Company Limited, Indian Reprint 2009.
4. Steven Holzner, PHP: The Complete Reference, 2nd Edition, Tata McGrawHill Publishing
Company Limited, Indian Reprint 2009.
5. Vikram Vaswani, MYSQL: The Complete Reference, 2nd Edition, Tata McGraw -Hill
Publishing Company Limited, Indian Reprint 2009
Student Activity:
1. Suggest list of open source softwares for the commercial software you come across
Cloud Computing
Objectives:
1. Discuss, with confidence, what is cloud computing and what are key security and control
considerations within cloud computing environments.
2. Identify various cloud services.
3. Assess cloud characteristics and service attributes, for compliance with enterprise
objectives.
4. Explain the four primary cloud category types.
5. Evaluate various cloud delivery models.
6. Contrast the risks and benefits of implementing cloud computing.
7. Specify security threat exposure within a cloud computing infrastructure.
8. Recognize steps and processes used to perform an audit assessment of a cloud computing
environment.
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Course Outcome:
1)Explain the core concepts of the cloud computing paradigm: how and why this paradigm shift
came about, the characteristics, advantages and challenges brought about by the various models
and services in cloud computing
2)Apply the fundamental concepts in datacenters to understand the tradeoffs in power, efficiency
and cost
3)Discuss system virtualization and outline its role in enabling the cloud computing system
model
4)Illustrate the fundamental concepts of cloud storage and demonstrate their use in storage
systems such as Amazon S3 and HDFS
5)Analyze various cloud programming models and apply them to solve problems on the cloud
Unit 1
Cloud Computing Overview Origins of Cloud computing Cloud components - Essential
characteristics On-demand self-service , Broad network access , Location independent resource
pooling , Rapid elasticity , Measured service
Unit II
. Cloud scenarios Benefits: scalability , simplicity , vendors ,security.
Limitations Sensitive information - Application development Security concerns - privacy concern
with a third party - security level of third party - security benefits
Regularity issues: Government policies
Unit III
Cloud architecture: Cloud delivery model SPI framework , SPI evolution , SPI vs. traditional IT Model
Software as a Service (SaaS): SaaS service providers Google App Engine, Salesforce.com and google
platfrom Benefits Operational benefits - Economic benefits Evaluating SaaS
Platform as a Service ( PaaS ): PaaS service providers Right Scale Salesforce.com Rackspace
Force.com Services and Benefits
Unit IV
Infrastructure as a Service ( IaaS): IaaS service providers Amazon EC2 , GoGrid Microsoft soft
implementation and support Amazon EC service level agreement Recent developments Benefits
Cloud deployment model : Public clouds Private clouds Community clouds - Hybrid clouds Advantages of Cloud computing
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Unit V
Virtualization : Virtualization and cloud computing - Need of virtualization cost , administration , fast
deployment , reduce infrastructure cost - limitations
Types of hardware virtualization: Full virtualization - partial virtualization - para virtualization
Desktop virtualization: Software virtualization Memory virtualization - Storage virtualization Data
virtualization Network virtualization
Microsoft Implementation: Microsoft Hyper V Vmware features and infrastructure Virtual Box - Thin
client
REFERENCES:
1. Cloud computing a practical approach - Anthony T.Velte , Toby J. Velte Robert Elsenpeter TATA
McGraw- Hill , New Delhi 2010
2. Cloud Computing: Web-Based Applications That Change the Way You Work and Collaborate
Online - Michael Miller - Que 2008
Student Activity:
1.Prepare a list of companies that provide different cloud services
2, Create your own cloud using a local server
Elective- I
Hadoop & R Language
Course Objectives
Apply Data Mining and understand Decision Trees and Random Forests
Master the concepts of Hadoop 2.7 framework and its deployment in a cluster
environment
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Course Outcomes
Hadoop and R Language will prepare you to perform analytics and build models for real world
data science problems. It is the worlds most powerful programming language for statistical
computing and graphics making it a must know language for the aspiring Data Scientists. 'R'
wins strongly on Statistical Capability, Graphical capability, Cost and rich set of packages.
UNIT I
Introduction to BIG'Data '&' Hadoop Introduction to MapReduce '&' HDFS
UNIT II
The Hadoop MapReduce API & Algorithms. How to get started writing programs with Hadoop's API.
Programming methodologies and paradigms in Map Reduce Beyond basics: The flow; APIs; Creating
Input Formats and Output Formats; Driver; Mapper; Reducer; Streaming
UNIT III
Introduction to The'Hadoop'Ecosystem'Components An introduction to components surrounding Hadoop,
which complete the greater ecosystem of available, processing tools.
UNIT IV
R over view, basic syntax, data types, variable, operators, decision making, loops, functions
UNIT V
String, vectors, list, matrices, data frames, reshaping, packages, graphics.
References:
Hadoop: The Definitive Guide By: Tom White Hadoop in Practice (By: Alex Holmes )
Hadoop Operations (By: Eric Sammer ) Instant MapReduce Patterns - Hadoop Essentials How-to
(By: Srinath Perera )
An Introduction to R: A Programming Environment for Data Analysis and Graphics Author(s) William
N Venables, David M Smith.
The Art of R Programming: A Tour of Statistical Software Design Author(s) Norman Matloff
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Elective- I
NETWORK PROGRAMMING
Course Objectives
1. To understand inter-process and inter-system communication
2. To understand socket programming in its entirety
3. To understand usage of TCP/UDP / Raw sockets
4. To understand how to build network applications
Course Outcomes
Analyze the security requirements of a networked programming environment and identify
the issues to be solved;
2. come up with conceptual solutions to those issues;
1.
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3.
4.
5.
6.
UNIT I
INTRODUCTION : Overview of UNIX OS - Environment of a UNIX process - Process control
Process relationships Signals Inter-process Communication- overview of TCP/IP protocols
UNIT II
ELEMENTARY TCP SOCKETS: Introduction to Socket Programming Introduction to
Sockets Socket address Structures Byte ordering functions address conversion functions
Elementary TCP Sockets socket, connect,
bind, listen, accept, read, write , close functions Iterative Server Concurrent Server.
UNIT III
APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT:TCP Echo Server TCP Echo Client Posix Signal
handling Server with multiple clients boundary conditions: Server process Crashes, Server
host Crashes, Server Crashes and reboots,Server Shutdown I/O multiplexing I/O Models
select function shutdown function TCP echo Server (with multiplexing) poll function
TCP echo Client (with Multiplexing)
UNIT IV
SOCKET OPTIONS, ELEMENTARY UDP SOCKETS:Socket options getsocket and
setsocket functions generic socket options IP socketoptions ICMP socket options TCP
socket options Elementary UDP sockets UDP echo Server UDP echo Client Multiplexing
TCP and UDP sockets Domain name system gethostbyname function.
UNIT V
ADVANCED SOCKETS: Ipv4 and Ipv6 interoperability threaded servers thread creation
and termination TCP echo server using threads Mutexes condition variables raw sockets
raw socket creation raw socket output raw socket input ping program trace route
program.
REFERENCES:
1. W. Richard Stevens, B. Fenner, A.M. Rudoff, Unix Network Programming The Sockets
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Networking API, 3rd edition, Pearson, 2004.
2. W. Richard Stevens, S.A Rago, Programming in the Unix environment, 2nd edition,
Pearson,
2005.
Elective- I
Cyber laws
Course Objectives: The objectives of this course is to:
1.
2.
Enable learners to understand, explore, and acquire a critical understanding of Cyber Law
Develop competencies for dealing with frauds and deceptions (confidence tricks, scams)
and other cyber crimes for example, child pornography etc. that are taking place via the
Internet.
3.
Make learners conversant with the social and intellectual property issues emerging from
Cyberspace.
4.
Explore the legal and policy developments in various countries to regulate Cyberspace;
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5.
Develop the understanding of relationship between commerce and cyberspace; and give
learners in depth knowledge of Information Technology Act and legal frame work of
Right to Privacy, Data Security and Data Protection.
Course outcomes
At the end of the course, students should be able to:
1.
2.
3.
Examine areas of doctrinal and political debate surrounding rules and theories;
4.
Evaluate those rules and theories in terms of internal coherence and practical outcomes;
5.
Draw on the analysis and evaluation contained in primary and secondary sources
Unit I
Introduction: Computers and its Impact in Society, Overview of Computer and Web
Technology, Need for Cyber Law, Cyber Jurisprudence at International and Indian Level.
Unit II
Cyber Law- International Perspectives: UN &International Telecommunication Union
(ITU)Initiatives, Council of Europe -Budapest Convention on Cybercrime, Asia-Pacific
Economic Cooperation(APEC), Organization for Economic Co-operation and
Development(OECD), World Bank, Commonwealth of Nations.
Unit III
Constitutional& Human Rights Issues in Cyberspace: Freedom of Speech and Expression in
Cyberspace, Right to Access Cyberspace Access to Internet, Right to Privacy, Right to
Data Protection.
Unit IV
Cyber Crimes& Legal Framework: Cyber Crimes against Individuals, Institution and State,
Hacking, Digital Forgery, Cyber Stalking/Harassment, Cyber Pornography, Identity Theft
&Fraud, Cyber terrorism, Cyber Defamation, Different offences under IT Act, 2000.
Unit V
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Cyber Torts: Cyber Defamation, Different Types of Civil Wrong sunder the IT Act, 2000,
Intellectual Property Issues in Cyber Space, Interface with Copyright Law, Interface with
Patent Law, Trade marks & Domain Names Related issues
Reference Books
Elective- II
Advanced Android
Course Objective
The objective is to help learners to create applications using Google's Android open-source
platform. The course explains what Android is and how it compares to other mobile
environments, the setup of the Android Eclipse-based development tools, the Android SDK, all
essential features, as well as the advanced capabilities and APIs such as background services,
accelerometers, graphics, and GPS
Course Outcomes
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1. Build your own Android apps
2. Explain the differences between Android and other mobile development environments
3. Understand how Android applications work, their life cycle, manifest, Intents, and
using external resources
4. Design and develop useful Android applications with compelling user interfaces by using,
extending, and creating your own layouts and Views and using Menus.
5. Take advantage of Android's APIs for data storage, retrieval, user preferences, files,
databases, and content providers
6. Tap into location-based services, geo-coder, compass sensors, and create rich map-based
applications
7. Utilize the power of background services, threads, and notifications.
8. Use Android's communication APIs for SMS, telephony, network management, and
internet resources (HTTP).
9. Secure, tune, package, and deploy Android applications
Unit-I
Data Persistence: User Preferences, Persisting Data to Files, Using SQLite Databases
Unit-II
Messaging: SMS Messaging, Sending E-mail
Unit-III
Location-Based Services: Displaying Maps, Getting Location Data, Monitoring a Location,
Building a Location Tracker
Unit-IV
Android Services: Create your Own Service, Communication between Services and Activity,
Binding Activities to Services, Threading.
Unit-V
Exception Handling in Android: Handling Errors, Handling Exceptions Using Try, Catch and
Finally
Publishing Android Application: Prepare for Publishing; Deploy APK Files, Publishing on the
Android Market
Reference Books:
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
1.Android Programming: The Big Nerd Ranch Guide (Big Nerd Ranch Guides) By: Bill
Philips & Brian Hardy
2.Android Design Patterns: Interaction design solutions for developers by Greg Nudelman
3.Android User Interface Design: Turning Ideas and Sketches into Beautifully Designed Apps
By: Ian G. Clifton
4. Android Recipes: A Problem-Solution Approach By: Dave Smith & Jeff Friesen
5. Hello, Android: Introducing Google's Mobile Development Platform (Pragmatic
Programmers) By: Ed Burnette
6. Beginning Android Games By: Mario Zechner
7.Programming Android By: Zigurd Mednieks, Laird Dornin, G. Blake Meike & Masumi
Nakamura
Elective- II
Design of Video Games
Course Objectives
1. Discuss and define the terms and principles of game design and development.
2. Select and evaluate programming and scripting languages to develop particular games.
3. Define the structure and duties of the game development team.
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4. Practice animation production and creation tools.
5. Apply the mathematics used in game design.
6. Apply the physics needed to design computer games.
7. Apply artificial intelligence to developing computer games.
Course Outcomes
After completing this course, students will be able to understand all game development problems
and issues, such as story creation, selection of programming language, mathematical analysis,
physical analysis, graphics, multimedia, artificial intelligence, and others.
UNIT I
History of video games, game genres, The games industry, Theory of funativity: what is fun?
UNIT II
Game design teams and processes, Level design, Modeling
UNIT III
Human-computer interaction (HCI) & interface design, Computer graphics, collision detection, lighting,
and animation
UNIT IV
Game scripting and programming, Game data structures and algorithms
UNIT V
Artificial intelligence, Play testing
Reference Books
1. Introduction to Game Development Edited by: Steve Rabin ISBN: 1- 58450-377-7 Charles
River Media, May 2005.
2.Game Development Essentials: An Introduction. 3rd Edition
3. A Theory of Fun for Game Design, by Koster
4. Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art, by McCloud
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Elective- II
B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
a test plan in Test Director , Breaking the test plan into manageable components ,
Designing test cases and test steps, Analyzing the test plan, Developing Win Runner
automated test scripts, Creating a script through recording, Synchronizing the test,
Adding verification of GUI objects, bitmaps and text, and Managing the GUI map
Course Outcomes:
1 To be able to apply various test processes and continuous quality improvement
2 To be able to define the types of errors and fault models
3 To be able to use methods of test generation from requirements
4 To be able to use UML.
5 To be able to Test generation from FSM models
Unit-I
Basic Aspects of Software Testing: Testing in the Software Life Cycle, Product
Paradigms, Metrics and Measurement
Unit-II
Testing Processes: Processes in General, Test Planning and Control, Test Analysis and
Design, Test Implementation and Execution, Evaluating Exit Criteria and Reporting, Test
Closure
Unit-III
Test Management: Business Value of Testing, Test Management Documentation, Test
Estimation, Test Progress Monitoring and Control, Testing and Risk,
Unit-IV
Test Techniques: Specification-Based Techniques, Structure-Based Techniques, DefectBased Techniques, Experience-Based Testing Techniques, Static Analysis, Dynamic
Analysis, Choosing Testing Techniques,
Unit-V
Testing of Software Characteristics: Quality Attributes for Test Analysts,. Quality
Attributes for Technical Test Analysts.
References:
1. Guide to Advanced Software Testing by Anne Mette Jonassen Hass
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B.C.A Under CBCS with effect from Academic Year 2016-2017 (Revised in April, 2016)
Objectives
The Project work should be either an individual one or a group of not more than three members
and submit a project report at the end of the semester. The students shall defend their dissertation
in front of experts during viva-voce examinations.
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