Course syllabus
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Lectures • Exercises • Lab 1 • Lab 2• Lab 3• Lab 4 • Lab 5• Fire • Slack • Schedule
Slides from the Intro Lecture
Course-PM
TDA452 / DIT143 Functional programming lp2 HT24 (7.5 hp)
The course is offered by the Department of Computer Science and Engineering
Contact details [Slack]
- Examiner/lecturer: David Sands
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Teaching Assistants: |
Course Representatives |
Course purpose
Click to expand.
In this course, you will learn about functional programming through the Haskell programming language. Concrete topics encountered in the course include:
- functions as first-class values
- data structures (lists, tuples, user-defined data types)
- recursion and recursive data types
- polymorphism and type classes
- pure functions vs input-output
- modules and abstract data types
- testing functional programs
- lazy evaluations and infinite objects
- introduction to monads
Schedule
Lectures are pre-recorded. The scheduled meeting times are referred to as Class meetings (still called "lectures" in TimeEdit).
Week 1: Intro meeting on Monday 13:15, regular class meeting on Wednesday 10:00 and Thursday at 10:00.
Week 2 & on, class meetings are on Mondays (13.15) and Thursdays (10.00).
In addition, we have scheduled lab supervision hours were you can either meet a TA over zoom (from week 2) or in one of the computer rooms (from week 4).
- From week 2 onward: 15:15-17 on Mondays and Wednesdays via zoom: send a link to your room in #lab-supervision on Slack
- From week 4 onwards you may also ask questions at those times in person in the scheduled room. Please use #lab-supervision to join the queue for help either way.
Course literature
There is no mandatory literature for this course.
Click for a sample of potentially useful resources in addition to the videos and slides.
- Book: Programming in Haskell by Graham Hutton
- 2nd edition of a compact and well-written Haskell book that is a good fit for this course.
- Book: Learn You a Haskell for Great Good! (Links to an external site.) (freely available online).
- Real World Haskell by Bryan O'Sullivan, Don Stewart, and John Goerzen (freely available online).
- This is more advanced and more oriented toward practical Haskell programming. A good book to have on the shelf if you continue with Haskell. This is the course book for the Advanced Functional Programming course.
Course design
Teaching is through pre-recorded lectures and self-study exercises, supported by online meetings related to the most recent lecture. Class meetings are given two times a week.
There are four programming labs which are done in groups of two. Some of the labs are divided into two parts, so there are hand-in deadlines most study weeks. The final lab is a choice between an own mini project or a more conventional lab. Conventional labs are graded electronically; if a lab is not passed then students get multiple chances to resubmit until the given final deadline. Those who choose to do a project for the final lab will give an oral presentation of the lab (usually over zoom).
The lab submission is through the Fire system (see links from the labs).
Learning objectives and syllabus
Learning objectives
- write small to medium-sized functional programs for a variety of applications;
- exploit a variety of programming techniques typical in functional programming, such as: use of recursion, modelling with recursive datatypes, abstraction and reuse with the help of higher order functions and monads;
- appreciate the strengths and possible weaknesses of the functional programming paradigm.
Examination form
The examination of the course has two parts:
- Weekly assignments ("labs"), done in groups of 2 students.
- An individual written exam after the end of the course (in January). The re-exam is given in April.
Exam dates, once decided, are given on the student portal (search: TDA452 - the exam time is the same for GU students) https://www.student.chalmers.se/sp/examdates_list -
Course code Course name Examination date Begins Location Length First day
for sign-upLast day
for sign-upTDA452 Functional programming
Module: 0211Tue 13 Jan 2026 8.30 am Johanneberg INSP 4 hours 13 Oct 2025 18 Dec 2025 TDA452 Functional programming
Module: 0211Thu 09 Apr 2026 2.00 pm Johanneberg INSP 4 hours 23 Feb 2026 22 Mar 2026 - Remember that you have to sign up for the exam ahead of time (see last column)!
To pass the course it is necessary to pass all assignments and the written exam. Your final grade is determined by your grade on the written exam only (taking into account any bonus points).
Written Exam
The exam is written using the Inspera electronic exam system. See the slides from the intro lecture for more information.
The grades awarded on the exam are 3, 4, 5 for Chalmers students, and G, VG for GU students. (G on the GU side corresponds to 3 or 4 on the Chalmers side; VG corresponds to a 5.)
A sample of old exams is available. Note that the exam includes a list of useful functions. The only other permitted materials are a dictionary.
Lab Assignments
In the table below you will find links to lab assignments that have to be handed in.
- Each assignment has a submission deadline at which you must submit your solutions. Your first submission is expected to be a serious attempt to complete the lab.
- If your submission does not pass (it's incorrect or simply badly coded) then you must resubmit. You can resubmit several times if need be, until the cutoff deadline.
- The cutoff deadline is absolute: it is the last possible date to hand in your solutions. If your solutions are not passed you get no further chances this term.
- For questions about Fire administration (such as deadline extensions) please contact Daniël.
- If you want to do a project instead of labs 4 and 5 then please contact Dave at the beginning of January with your proposal. If you are approved for a project, then this is handed in via fire with the same deadline as lab 5 and graded orally (over zoom) later that week by arrangement.
| Lab | Part | Submission deadline | Cutoff deadline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lab 1 | Thursday, Week 1 (2025-11-06) |
Friday, Week 2 (2025-11-14) |
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| Lab 2 | A | Wednesday, Week 2 (2025-11-12) |
Friday, Week 4 (2025-11-28) |
| B | Wednesday, Week 3 (2025-11-19) |
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| Lab 3 | A | Wednesday, Week 4 (2025-11-26) |
Friday, Week 6 (2025-12-12) |
| B | Wednesday, Week 5 (2025-12-03) |
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| Lab 4 | Wednesday, Week 6 (2025-12-10) |
Friday, Week 7 (2025-12-19) |
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| Lab 5 | Wednesday, Week 7 (2025-12-17) |
2026-01-09 |
Course summary:
| Date | Details | Due |
|---|---|---|