Project Index
Project Index
2. Requirement Analysis
2.1 Feasibility study
2.1.1 Technical Feasibility
2.1.2 Economical Feasibility
2.1.2.1 Cost Benefit Analysis
2.1.3 Operational Feasibility
2.2. Software Requirement Specification
2.2.1 Functional Requirements
2.2.1.1. Input
2.2.1.2. Output
2.2.1.3. Computational
2.2.1.4. Storage ( database requirements)
2.2.2. Non-Functional Requirements
2.2.2.1. Quality Metrics
2.2.2.2. Reliability
2.2.2.3. Usability
2.2.2.4. Response Time
2.2.2.5. Throughput
2.2.2.6. Availability
2.2.2.7. Maintainability
2.2.3. Environment & Technology Requirements
2.2.3.1. Hardware Requirements
2.2.3.2. Software Requirements
3. Design
3.1. System Design
3.1.1. Introduction to UML.
3.1.2. UML Diagrams.
3.1.2.1. Scenarios.
3.1.2.2. Use-Case Diagrams.
3.1.2.3. Class Diagrams.
3.1.2.4. Object Diagrams.
3.1.2.5. Sequence Diagrams ( or Collaboration Diagrams).
3.1.2.6. Activity Diagrams.
3.1.2.7. State Diagrams.
3.1.2.8. Component Diagrams. (Optional)
2
4. Coding
4.1. Sample Code (3-4 pages).
5. Testing
5.1. Introduction to Testing.
5.2. Test Cases (module-wise)
6. Screenshots
6.1. Input Screens (Forms).
6.2. Output Screens (Reports).
7. Conclusion
Consists of two paragraphs one that concludes the project and another the
future scope of the project.
8. Bibiliography.
Note:
Font size: main headings – Times New Roman – 16 - bold
Side headings - Times New Roman – 14 - bold
Inner matter – Times New Roman – 12 – normal
Things
Relationships
Diagrams
(1) Things:
Things are the most important building blocks of UML. Things can be:
Structural
Behavioral
Grouping
Annotational
Structural things:
The Structural things define the static part of the model. They represent
physical and conceptual elements. Following are the brief descriptions of the
structural things.
Class:
Class represents set of objects having similar responsibilities.
Interface:
Interface defines a set of operations which specify the responsibility of a
class.
Collaboration:
Collaboration defines interaction between elements.
Use case:
Use case represents a set of actions performed by a system for a specific
goal.
Component:
Component describes physical part of a system.
Node:
A node can be defined as a physical element that exists at run time.
7
Behavioral things:
A behavioral thing consists of the dynamic parts of UML models. Following
are the behavioral things:
Interaction:
Interaction is defined as a behavior that consists of a group of messages
exchanged among elements to accomplish a specific task.
State machine:
State machine is useful when the state of an object in its life cycle is
important. It defines the sequence of states an object goes through in
response to events. Events are external factors responsible for state change.
Grouping things:
Grouping things can be defined as a mechanism to group elements of a
UML model together. There is only one grouping thing available:
Package:
Package is the only one grouping thing available for gathering structural and
behavioral things.
Annotational things:
Annotational things can be defined as a mechanism to capture remarks,
descriptions, and comments of UML model elements. Note is the only one
Annotational thing available.
Note:
A note is used to render comments, constraints etc of an UML element.
(2) Relationship :
Relationship is another most important building block of UML. It shows how
elements are associated with each other and this association describes the
functionality of an application.
There are four kinds of relationships available.
Dependency:
Dependency is a relationship between two things in which change in one
element also affects the other one.
Association:
Association is basically a set of links that connects elements of an UML
model. It also describes how many objects are taking part in that
relationship.
8
Generalization:
Generalization can be defined as a relationship which connects a specialized
element with a generalized element. It basically describes inheritance
relationship in the world of objects.
Realization:
Realization can be defined as a relationship in which two elements are
connected. One element describes some responsibility which is not
implemented and the other one implements them. This relationship exists in
case of interfaces.
Any real world system is used by different users. The users can be
developers, testers, business people, analysts and many more. So
before designing a system the architecture is made with different
perspectives in mind. The most important part is to visualize the
system from different viewer.s perspective. The better we understand
the better we make the system.
UML plays an important role in defining different perspectives of a
system. These perspectives are:
Design
Implementation
Process
Deployment
And the centre is the Use Case view which connects all these four. A
Use case represents the functionality of the system. So the other
perspectives are connected with use case.
9
UML is popular for its diagrammatic notations. We all know that UML is for
visualizing, specifying, constructing and documenting the components of
10
software and non software systems. Here the Visualization is the most
important part which needs to be understood and remembered by heart.
UML notations are the most important elements in modeling. Efficient and
appropriate use of notations is very important for making a complete and
meaningful model. The model is useless unless its purpose is depicted
properly.
11
Part –II
11) Documents
a) PPT
b) UML Diagrams
12) Execution Process of the Project
12
13
14
15
MCA
6th SEMESTER
Syllabi
( Tentative)
Chairman
Board of Studies
(2005-08)
FOR
MCA
1. ARRANGEMENT OF CONTENTS:
The sequence in which the project report material should be arranged and bound should be as
follows:
The dimension of the project report should be in A4 size. The project report should be
bound using flexible cover of the thick white art paper. The cover should be printed in
black letters and the text for printing should be identical.
17
3. PREPARATION FORMAT:
3.1 Cover Page & Title Page – A specimen copy of the Cover page & Title page of the project
report are given in Appendix 1.
3.2 Bonafide Certificate – The Bonafide Certificate shall be in double line spacing using Font
Style Times New Roman and Font Size 14, as per the format in Appendix 2.
The certificate shall carry the supervisor’s signature and shall be followed by the supervisor’s
name, academic designation (not any other responsibilities of administrative nature),
department and full address of the institution where the supervisor has guided the student.
The term ‘SUPERVISOR’ must be typed in capital letters between the supervisor’s name
and academic designation.
3.3 Abstract – Abstract should be one page synopsis of the project report typed double line
spacing, Font Style Times New Roman and Font Size 14.
3.4 Table of Contents – The table of contents should list all material following it as well as any
material which precedes it. The title page and Bonafide Certificate will not find a place
among the items listed in the Table of Contents but the page numbers of which are in lower
case Roman letters. One and a half spacing should be adopted for typing the matter under this
head. A specimen copy of the Table of Contents of the project report is given in Appendix 3.
3.5 List of Tables – The list should use exactly the same captions as they appear above
the tables in the text. One and a half spacing should be adopted for typing the matter under
this head.
3.6 List of Figures – The list should use exactly the same captions as they appear below
the figures in the text. One and a half spacing should be adopted for typing the matter under
this head.
3.7 List of Symbols, Abbreviations and Nomenclature – One and a half spacing should
be adopted or typing the matter under this head. Standard symbols, abbreviations etc. should be
used.
3.8 Chapters – The chapters may be broadly divided into 3 parts (i) Introductory chapter, (ii)
Chapters developing the main theme of the project work (iii) and Conclusion.
The main text will be divided into several chapters and each chapter may be further divided
into several divisions and sub-divisions.
Footnotes should be used sparingly. They should be typed single space and
placed directly underneath in the very same page, which refers to the material they
annotate.
18
Appendices should be numbered using Arabic numerals, e.g. Appendix 1, Appendix 2, etc.
Appendices, Tables and References appearing in appendices should be numbered and
referred to at appropriate places just as in the case of chapters.
Appendices shall carry the title of the work reported and the same title shall be made in
the contents page also.
3.10 List of References –The listing of references should be typed 4 spaces below the heading
“REFERENCES” in alphabetical order in single spacing left – justified. The reference
material should be listed in the alphabetical order of the first author. The name of the
author/authors should be immediately followed by the year and other details.
A typical illustrative list given below relates to the citation example quoted above.
REFERENCES
3. Shin, K.G. and Mckay, N.D. (1984) ‘Open Loop Minimum Time Control of
Mechanical Manipulations and its Applications’, Proc.Amer.Contr.Conf., San Diego,
CA, pp. 1231-1236.
3.10.1 Table and figures - By the word Table, is meant tabulated numerical data in the body of the
project report as well as in the appendices. All other non-verbal materials used in the body of
the project work and appendices such as charts, graphs, maps, photographs and diagrams
may be designated as figures.
4. TYPING INSTRUCTIONS:
One and a half spacing should be used for typing the general text. The general text shall be
typed in the Font style ‘Times New Roman’ and Font size 14.
19
*****
20
A PROJECT REPORT
<Font Size 14>
Submitted by
<Font Size 14><Italic>
< Emblem>
A PROJECT REPORT
Submitted by
SANDHY. A
<Emblem>
MAY 2008
22
CERTIFICATE
This is to certify that it is a bonafide work done by Mr./Ms.Mrs. __________________ during the
year 200 - 200 in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the award of degree of Master of Computer
Applications in the <name of the Department and College address> This work is not submitted to any
INTERNAL GUIDE
To Date:
PERIOD :
PROJECT TITLE :
REFERENCES EXAMPLE:
BIBLIOGRAPHY EXAMPLE:
Appendix
NOTE: The internal guide must be available during Viva-Voce Examination of the concerned
student(s).
25
The purpose of this note is to describe how to organize the written Dissertation submitted as
partial fulfillment of your MCA. Degree.
1. You have identified a worthwhile problem, which has not been previously solved.
2. You have answered the question.
The sole purpose of the dissertation is to prove that you have made an original and useful contribution to
knowledge. The examiners need answers to the following questions:
To prove the originality and value of your contribution, you must present a through review of the existing
literature on the subject, and on closely related subjects. Then, by making direct reference to your
literature review, you must demonstrate that your question.
Describing how you answered the question is usually easier to write about, since you have been
intimately involved in the details over the course of your studies.
26
1. INTRODUCTION
This is a general introduction to what the dissertation is all about-it is not just a description of the contents
of each section. Briefly summarize the question (You will be stating the question in detail later), some of
the reasons why it is a worthwhile question, and perhaps give an overview of you main results. This is a
birds-eye view of the answers to the main questions answered in the dissertation (see above).
2. BACKGROUND INFORMATION
A brief section giving background information may be necessary, especially if your work spans two or
more traditional fields. That means your readers may not have any experience with some of the material
needed to follow your dissertation, so you need to give it to them. A different title than that given above
is usually better; e.g., “A Brief Review of Frammis Algebra”.
Here you review the state of the art relevant to your dissertation. Again, a different title is probably
appropriate; e.g., “State of the Art in Zylon Algotithm”. The idea is to present (critical analysis a little
bit later) the major ideas in the state of the art right up to, but not including, your own personal brilliant
ideas.
You organize this section by idea, and not by author or by publication. For example if there have been
three important main approachs to Zylon Algorithms to date, you might organize subsections around
these three approaches, if necessary:
3.1. Interactive Approximate of Zylons
3.2. Statistical Weighting of Zylons
3.3. Graph-theoretic Approaches to Zylon Manipulation
4. PROBLEM STATEMENT
Item 2 above is where you analyze information which you presented in Section 3. For example, may be
your problem is to “develop a Zylon algorithm capable of handling very large scale problems in
reasonable time” (you would further describe what you mean by “large scale” and “reasonable time” in
the problem statement). Now in your analysis of the art ou would show how each class of current
approaches fails (i.e. can handle only small problems, o taks too much time). In the last part of this
section you would explain why having a large scale fast Xylon algorithm is useful; e.g., by describing
applications where it can be used.
This part of the dissertation is much more free-form. It may have one or several sections and subsections.
But it all has only one purpose: to convince the examiners that you solved the problem that you set for
yourself in Section 4. So show what you did that is relevant to solving the problem: if there were blind
all eye and dead ends, do not include these.
6. CONCLUSIONS
You generally cover three things in the Conclusions section, and each of these usually merits a separate
subsection:
a) Conclusions
b) Summary of Contributions
c) Future Research
7. REFERENCES
The list of references is closely tied to the review of the state of the art given in section 3. most examines
scan your list of references looking for the important for the important works in the field, so make sure
they are listed and referred to in section 3. Truth be known, most examiners also look for their own
publications if they are in the topic area of the dissertation, so list these too. Besides, reading your
examiner’s papers usually gives you a clue as to the type of questions they are likely to ask.
All references given must be referred to in the main body of the dissertation. Note the difference from a
Bibliography, which may include works that are not directly referenced in the dissertation. Organize the
list of references either alphabetically by author surname (preferred), or b order of citation in the
dissertation.
28
8. APPENDICES
What goes in the appendices? Any material which impedes the smooth development of your
presentation, but which is important to justify the results of a dissertation. Generally it is material that is
of too nitty-gritty a level of detail for inclusion in the main body of the dissertation, by which should be
available for perusal by the examiners to convince them sufficiently. Examples include program listings,
immense tables of data, lengthy mathematical proofs or derivations, etc.,
The purpose of your dissertation is to clearly document an original contribution to knowledge. You
may develop computer programs, prototypes, or other tools as a means of providing your points, but
remember, the dissertation is not about the tool, it is about the contribution to knowledge. Tools such as
computer programs are fine and useful products, but you can’t get an advanced degree just for the tool.
You must use the tool to demonstrate that you have made an original contribution to knowledge; e.g.,
through its use, or ideas it embodies.
ABSTRACT
Because on-line search databases typically contain only abstracts, it is vital to write a complete but concise
description of your work to notice potential readers into obtaining a copy of the full paper. This article describes
how to write a good computer architecture abstract for both conference and journal papers. Writers should follow
a checklist consisting of motivation, problem statement, approach, results, and conclusions. Following this
checklist should increase the chance of people taking the time to obtain and read your complete paper.
INTRODUCTION
Now that the use of on-line publication databases is prevalent, writing a really good abstract has become
even more important than it was a decade ago. Abstracts have always served the function of “selling” your work,
But now, instead of merely convincing the reader to keep reading the rest of the attached paper, an abstract must
convince the reader to leave the comfort of an office and go hunt down a copy- of the article from a library ( or
worse , obtain one after a long wait through inter-library loan). In a business context , an “executive summary” is
often the only piece of a report read by the people who matter ; and it should be similar in contest if not tone to a
journal paper abstract.
29
Despite the fact that an abstract is quite belief , it must do almost as much work as the multipage paper that
follows it. In a computer architecture paper, this means that it should in most cases include the following sections.
Each section is typically a single sentence , although there is room for creativity. In particular , the parts may be
merged or spread among a set of sentences. Use the following as a checklist for your next abstract.
MOTIVATION
Why do we are about the problem and the results? If the problem is not obviously “interesting” it might be
better to put motivation first; but if your work is incremental progress on a problem that is widely
recognized as important, then it is probably better to put the problem statement first to indicate which piece
of the larger problem you are breaking off to work on. This section should include the importance of your
work, the difficulty of the area , and the impact it might have if successful.
PROBLEM STATEMENT
What problem are you trying to solve ? What is the scope of your work (a, generalized approach , or for a
specific situation)? Be careful not to use too much jargon. In some cases it is appropriate to put the problem
statement before the motivation, but usually this only works if most readers already understand I why the
problem is important.
RESULTS
What’s answer? Specifically , most good computer architecture papers conclude that something is so many
percent faster , cheaper, smaller, or otherwise better that something else. Put the result there, in numbers.
Avoid vague, hand-waving results such as “very”, “small”, or “significant” . If you must be vague, you are
only given license to do so when you can talk about orders-of-magnitude improvement . There is a tension
here in that you should not provide numbers that can be easily misinterpreted, but on the other hand you do
not have room for all the caveats.
CONCLUSIONS
What are the implications of your answer? Is it going to change the world (unlikely), be a significant “win”,
be a nice hack , or simply serve as a road sign indicating that this path is a waste of time (all of the
previous results are useful). Are , your results general, potentially generalizable, or specific to a particular
case?
OTHER CONSIDERATIONS
An abstract must be a fully self-contained , capsule description of the paper. It can’t assume ( or
attempt to provoke) the reader into flipping through looking for an explanation of what is meant by some
vague statement. It must make sense all by itself. Some points to consider include:
* Meet the word count limitation. If your abstract runs too long, either it will be rejected or
someone will take a chainsaw to it to get it down to size. Your purposes will be better served by doing
30
the difficulty task of cutting yourself, rather that leaving it to someone else who might, be more
incrested in meeting size restrictions than an representing your efforts
in the best possible manner. An abstract word limit of 150 to 200 words is common.
Any major restrictions or limitations on the results should be stated, if only by using “weasel-
words” such as “might” , “could”, “may” and “seem”.
Think of a half-dozen search phrases and keywords that people looking for your work might
use. Be sure that those exact phrases appears in your abstract , so that they will turn up at the
top of a search result listing.
Usually the context of a paper is set by the publication it appears in (for example , IEEE
computer magazines articles are generally about computer technology). But , if you r paper
appears in a some what un-traditional venue, be sure to include in the problem statement
the domain or topic area that it is really applicable to.
Some publications request “keywords” . These have two purposes. They are used to facilitate
keyword index searches. Which are greatly reduced in importance now that on-line abstract
text searching is commonly used. However , they are also used to assign papers to review
committees or editors, which can be extremely important to your fate. So make sure that the
keyword’s you pick make assigning your paper to a review category obvious ( for example,
if there is a list of conference topics, use your chosen topic area as one of the keyword
tuples).
CONCLUSION
Writing an efficient abstract is hard work, but will repay you with increased impact on the
world by enticing people to read your publications. Make sure that all the components of a good abstract
are included in the one you write.
FURTHER READING
Mchaelson , Herbert, How to write & publish Engineering Papers and Reports, Oryx Press, 1990.
Chapter 6 discusses abstracts.
Cremmins, Edward, The art of abstracting 2nd Edition, info Resources Press , April 1996. This is an
entire book about abstracting , written primarily for professional abstracts.
31
TABLE OF CONTENTS
ABSTRACT iii
LIST OF TABLE xvi
LIST OF FIGURES xviii
LIST OF SYMBOLS xxvii
1. INTRODUCTION 1
1.1 GENERAL 1
1.2 .... ......... 2
1.2.1 General 5
1.2.2 ........... 12
1.2.2.1 General 19
1.2.2.2 . . . . . . . . . . 25
1.2.2.3 . . . . . . 29
1.2.3 . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
1.3 . . . . . . . . . . .. 45
1.4 .................. 58
2. LITERATURE REVIEW 69
2.1 GENERAL 75
2.2 .......... 99
2.2 …………… 100
3. ……………………….
32
---------------
(i) The candidate must have passed the Bachelor of Engineering/Technology/Architecture Degree in
appropriate branch of this University or an examination recognized by this University as equivalent there
to and secured not less than 55% marks in aggregate.
However, candidates who have qualified themselves at the GATE examination shall be given
priority in admission to M.E./M.Tech./M.Planning courses. Further, candidates seeking admission in to
specified P.G. courses shall be required to appear at a separate entrance test(s) to be conducted by the
University. In implementing the above regulation, the following guidelines are stipulated.
(a) Total number of candidates admitted in to a course (specialization) with or without GATE score
should not exceed approved sanctioned strength.
(b) Only after all GATE qualified candidates have been considered for admission, non GATE
candidates may be considered for admission in to those courses and under those categories (i.e.,
O.C., S.C., S.T., B.C., etc.) in which vacancies exist.
(ii) After passing B.E./B.Tech./B.Arch. Degree examination in the appropriate branch of this
University or an examination recognized by this University as equivalent thereto, the candidate should
have undergone a regular courses of study as here in after prescribed, for not less than four semesters
(each semester of about 16 weeks duration) and passed the prescribed examination.
(iii) Candidates pursuing the courses on a part-time basis (Evening course) should be employed in any
recognized local establishment or Institution or Government service and shall have a minimum of two
years experience after graduation. The duration of the course for part-time students shall be six
semesters.
33
(iv) Members of the teaching staff of the University College of Engineering and other local
Engineering colleges may be permitted to undergo the course on a part-time basis (Daytime) and
complete the whole course and examination in not less than six semesters taking two or three papers
only in a semester.
1.1 The normal duration of the course is 2 academic years for M.E / M.Tech/M.Planning Degree.
1.2 Candidates shall have pursued a regular course of study , as detailed below, for not less than two
academic years, and shall have fulfilled the academic requirements laid down and shall have passed
all the prescribed examinations.
2.1 A regular course of study during an academic year/semester means a minimum attendance of 75% of
all the subjects computed by totaling the number of periods conducted over the semester as specified
in the schemes of instructions.
However, in special cases and for sufficient causes shown, Chairman of Board of Governors may, on
the recommendation of the Principal, Dean (Academic Affairs) and Head of the Department
concerned, condone the deficiency in the average attendance to an extent of 10% for reasons such as
ill-health, if the application for condonation is submitted at the time of actual illness and is supported
by certificate of authorized Medical Officer approved by the Principal.
In the case of students, who participate in co- curricular, extra curricular activities like student
seminars, N.S.S, N.C.C, Inter-collegiate tournaments approved by the College and any other
activities conducted by Andhra University, Inter-University tournaments conducted by the Inter-
University Boards and any such other activities involving the representation of the College/University
with the prior approval of the Principal, the candidate may be deemed to have attended the college
during the actual period of such activity, solely for the purpose of attendance.
2.2 A candidate who cannot satisfy the attendance requirements as specified in the clause 2.1, because of
late admission under special circumstances, reasonable and acceptable to the College of Engineering
on the basis of documents, shall attend at least 50% of the total scheduled periods during that semester
and shall have attended at least 90% of the total periods of instructions held from the date of
admission.
2.3 The criterion for promotion from 1 st semester to 2nd semester and to the subsequent semesters is based
on the requisite attendance put up by the candidate.
2.4 A candidate who fails to satisfy the regulation under the clause 2.1 or 2.2, shall not be allowed for the
University examinations at the end of the semester and shall not be allowed for promotion to the next
semester of study. He/ She shall be required to repeat the entire course of study of that semester.
3.1 The period of instruction shall comprise of a minimum of 15/16 weeks. The semester end
examinations shall ordinarily be held after completion of 15/16 weeks.
34
3.2 There shall be no supplementary examinations.
4. The examinations for the M.E/M. Tech Degree shall be conducted as per the prescribed Schemes in all
the branches of study offered by AU College of Engineering (Autonomous).
(i) Internal evaluation of the work done by the students during the semester for 30 marks in each
theory subject and for 50 marks or such other marks prescribed in the scheme of examination, in
each practical/ Industrial Training/project.
(ii) Semester end examination as detailed in the scheme of examination for 70 marks in each theory
subject as given in the scheme.
.
5.1 The marks for the internal evaluation shall be awarded by the concerned teachers based on class work,
quiz, viva-voce, two mid-examinations out of which one may be online examination etc., according to
a scheme/schedule to be notified by the Department at the beginning of the semester.
5.2 The semester end examination in each theory subject, for a maximum of 70 marks, shall be conducted
by the University/College.
5.3 The semester end examination in practical/Industrial Training/ project for 50 marks or such other
marks prescribed in the scheme of examination shall be conducted by the Department.
5.4 Candidates shall be required to produce complete and certified records of the work done by them in
each of the practical subjects at the time of semester end practical examination, failing which they will
not be allowed for such examination.
5.5 The candidate is required to obtain a minimum of 28 marks out of 70 in the semester end examination.
5.6 There is no sessional marks minimum in each subject.
5.7 THE MARKS THUS OBTAINED WILL BE CONVERTED TO GRADES ON A 10.0 POINT
SCALE AND THEN TO SEMESTER GRADE POINT AVERAGE (SGPA) AND
SUBSEQUENTLY CUMULATIVE GRADE POINT AVERAGE IS AWARDED AT THE END OF
THE COURSE
GRADES AND GRADE POINT DETAILS
Further these letter grades carry points associated with them in a quantified hierarchy.
For example if a student gets the Grades in one semester A, A, B, B, B, D in the subjects having 2(s 1),
4(s2), 4(s3), 4(s4), 4(s5), 2(s6) credits respectively,
If a student gets the grades in another semester D, A, B, C, A, E, A in the subjects having credits
4(s1), 2(s2), 4(s3), 2(s4), 4(s5), 4(s6), 2(s7) respectively,
The SGPA is
SGPA = [6(D) 4(s1) + 9(A) 2(s2) + 8(B) 4(s3) + 7(C) 2(s4) + 9(A) 4(s5) + 5(E) 4(s6) + 9(A)
2(s7 ) ] / [4(s1) + 2(s2) + 4(s3) + 2(s4) + 4(s5) + 4(s6) + 2(s7)]
= 162/22 = 7.36
CGPA = (9 2 + 9 4 + 8 4 + 8 4 + 8 4 + 6 2 + 6 4 + 9 2 + 8 4 + 7 2 + 9 4 + 5 9
+ 9 2) /(22 + 20)
= 7.7
6.1 A candidate shall be declared to have passed in any subject (theory) if he /she secures not less than
“E” Grade in theory and practical/industrial training/project, provided that the result otherwise is
withheld.
6.2 A candidate shall be deemed to have satisfied the minimum requirement for the award of the Degree;
(i) If he/she is declared to have passed all the subjects (theory and practical subjects) included
in the Scheme of Examination of 4 semesters
36
and
6.3 A candidate may be permitted to improve his/her performance by reappearing for the whole of the
University examinations, only in all the theory subjects of a semester , after completion of the 2
years course of study and during the four consecutive examinations only.
Such an improvement can be availed of only once, for each of the semester examinations of the course
of study, provided that all the subjects of the semester shall have been passed as per the clause 6.1.
When considered in its totality, better of the two performances (as a whole but not subject wise) shall
be taken into consideration for the purpose of awarding First Class. There shall be no subject wise
improvement permitted in any semester of study for the above purpose. In any case, no such
improvement shall be permitted after completion of four academic years from the year of admission.
6.4 Candidates, who fail to satisfy clause 6.2 (ii) may be permitted to obtain 5.0 CGPA within 2 years
after completing the course of study by appearing at the University examinations only of
M.E/M.Tech/M.Planning subjects of their choice. Any candidate, who fails to attain the minimum
CGPA of 5.0 even after such appearances, during a total of four academic years from the year of
admission, shall become ineligible for the award of M.E/ M.Tech/M.Planing Degree.
6.5 There shall be no provision for the improvement of internal assessment marks in any theory or
practical subject in any semester of study.
7. The viva voce examination on the dissertation or project or thesis shall be conducted by a Board
of minimum four examiners consisting of
The valuation of the dissertation, project or thesis shall be as provided in the scheme of examination of
each course.
8. Whenever there is a change of regulations, scheme and syllabi, a candidate who fails in any subject
or who wants to improve his/her performance as per clause 6.4 , will be permitted to appear for the
University examinations conducted during the subsequent 2 years only, under the previous
regulations, scheme and syllabi.
9. All the candidates who have satisfied the minimum requirement as specified above, shall be arranged
in two classes (first class and second class) based on the CGPA obtained in the examinations.
(i) The First Class is awarded for those who have obtained a CGPA of 6.0 and above,
and
(ii) The Second Class is awarded for those who obtained a CGPA of 5.0 and above but less than 6.0.
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Candidates who pass in first class without failure in any one of the subjects in the entire course of
study and obtained a CGPA of 7.0 and above shall be declared to have passed in First Class with
Distinction. However, candidates who have improved their performance as per clause 6.4 shall not be
eligible to be awarded First Class with Distinction.
10. The CGPA can be converted to percentage by multiplying CGPA with 10.0, in case of requirement by
any other University or any other purpose.