6.001 Spring 2005,How should I write up my project?
Late homework will not be accepted,In case of illness or absence from MIT,
make arrangements to complete assignments with your recitation instructor,
Your TA will examine your project solutions and offer you feedback on them,It's
your responsibility to provide clear,convincing answers that are easy to verify,If
your work is very messy or disorganized,it will not get full credit even if,after
painful examination,it turns out to be mostly correct,You will also need to
organize your work for yourself so that you can present it in tutorial and use it for
review later,Here are some guidelines,
Common sense,
o Put your name on your project,
o Answer the questions in order,
o Make it clear when the answer to one exercise stops and the next
one starts,
o Make sure your code is properly "pretty printed",so that the
indentations line up,If you are printing out a copy,use a fixed-width
font,so that the indentation lines up properly,
Leave yourself time to write literate,clear answers to all questions,Do not
simply submit transcripts of your Scheme sessions,
Make it clear what you are claiming about each program you submit,
Attach a clear status description to them,e.g.,
o "thoroughly tested using these examples,no known bugs"
o "worked on this simple example,no known bugs"
o "looks correct to me,but not tested"
o "worked on these examples,but failed on these others"
o "syntax error,but I think it's fixable"
o "there's a bug,but I think it's fixable"
o "this is a partial draft"
Do not include verbatim copies of code that we gave you,Include it only if
have changed a portion or had to incorporate some of it into your own
work,
Learn how to use Edwin buffers to develop your code,and how make
extracts from the Scheme transcript buffer,It will save you a lot of time,
Show examples of your code running on test cases,However,be sure to
comment out these cases,so that your entire electronic submission can
be treated as a Scheme buffer,