CSE 531:
Automata, Computability, and Complexity

Larry Ruzzo, Fall 1996

TuTh 10:30-11:50, 224 Sieg

StaffNameEmailPhoneOffice Hours
Instructor: Larry Ruzzo ruzzo@cs543-6298Tu 2:30-3:20 F  1:00-2:20Sieg 415
TA: Nitin Sharma nitin@cs MW 3:30-4:20Sieg 326A

Class E-mail: (Last update: 10/21/96 at 09PM.)
A log of all messages sent out to the class e-mail list (cse531@cs.washington.edu).

Textbook Errata

Handouts Administrivia Homework Midterm Final
LaTeX Source: Course Organization Syllabus Collaboration 1 2 3 4 5 Midterm Final
PDF Acrobat: Course Organization Syllabus Collaboration 1 2 3 4 5 Midterm Final
PostScript: Course Organization Syllabus Collaboration 1 2 3 4 5 Midterm Final


About file formats: Most of the course materials above are provided in three formats:
LaTeX:
Plain ASCII text including formating commands. Simple things (e.g. assignments) are generally quite legible in this format. For figures and complex math stuff, these are hard-to-impossible to read.
Adobe Acrobat PDF :
The latest & greatest. A free viewer is available on some of the department's unix systems ("acroread"), or is perhaps aavailable from Adobe's Acrobat and the Web Page.

PostScript:
Use ghostview, or see the Ghostscript Home Page for free viewers (Mac, Windows, OS/2, Linux, ...)
At this time, Acrobat is supported on fewer systems, but is preferable if you can use it -- files are smaller, rendering is faster and more legible, and it can print (which Mac Ghostscript can't, for example).

Old Course Webs:

Autumn 1991 Autumn 1994


Portions of the CSE 531 Web may be reprinted or adapted for academic nonprofit purposes, providing the source is accurately quoted and duly credited. The CSE 531 Web: Copyright 1996, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Washington.
Comments to:
cse531-webmaster@cs.washington.edu
(Last Update: 03/21/05 )