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Final Exam - Introductory Programming in Java Skip navigation Introductory Programming in Java ANU College of Engineering & Computer Science Search query Search ANU web, staff & maps Search COMP6700 Lectures Labs Assignments menu Search query Search ANU web, staff & maps Search Search COMP6700 COMP6700 Outline Schedule People Mid-Semester Exam Final Exam Resources related sites Wattle Piazza Final Exam The Final Exam will take place at 09:00-12:30 Thursday 15 June. The exam will be completed electronically, using a special clean RSCS Lab environment without Internet access. Personal laptops, phones and other electronic devices may not be used. You are permitted to bring one A4 sheet of paper (with notes on both sides) to refer to during the exam. There will be 15 minutes to study the material followed by 180 minutes to complete the exam. Sample Exam We have provided a sample final exam. Please note: For the sample exam, you will need to fork this repo in order to get the template code and the tests. In the real exam, you will have the relevant files already pre-loaded in your system when you start up. You will not use Git in the real exam. You will be marked according to only what you do in the browser. It is therefore essential that you copy any code you write into the browser, as instructed in the exam. Many of the questions on the exam will be auto-graded, so: Your code must pass the tests. Each coding question has five tests, you will get one mark for each test that you pass. You need to ensure that the code that goes into the browser is correct and complete. For example, each class starts with package comp6700.exam;, if you were to delete this from the version you put in the browser, your code would not compile and you would get zero. There are 30 true/false questions, but you only need to answer 20 to get full marks. Make sure you carefully read the instructions, which explain that you will be penalized for incorrect answers. The marking scheme is designed so that answering randomly will give you an expected mark of zero. Your work is automatically saved as you type. There’s a small notification at the top right of the exam that gives you a checksum for the exam and the number of bytes you’ve typed so far. There is no ‘save’ button. You simply work away, and your work is automatically saved. You can test this by quitting your browser and then restarting it and you will find that your work is just as it was when you left off. If you change your mind on any of the questions, use the ‘clear’ button to clear your answer. Final Exam 2016 Paper and Code This is the exam paper and the starter code (Balls.java) for the Question 4 which was offered at the final exam last year: final_exam2016.pdf Balls.java A Short movie to illustrate Q4 tasks Updated:  02 Jun 2017/ Responsible Officer:  Head of School/ Page Contact:  Alexei Khorev Contact ANU Copyright Disclaimer Privacy Freedom of Information +61 2 6125 5111 The Australian National University, Canberra CRICOS Provider : 00120C ABN : 52 234 063 906 You appear to be using Internet Explorer 7, or have compatibility view turned on. Your browser is not supported by ANU web styles. » Learn how to fix this » Ignore this warning in future