Ucsc cse 103 CSE103: Computational Models Various representations for regular languages, context-free grammars, normal forms, simple parsing, pumping lemmas, Turing machines, the Church-Turing thesis, intractable problems, the P-NP question. So it's my last quarter here and I need to take one more Breadth Elective for my CS major: - CSE 103 - Computational Models - Delbert Bailey - CSE 160/L - Intro Computer Graphics - Alex Pang* - CSE 120 - Computer Architecture - Jose Renau* - CSE 130 - Computer Systems - David 2025-2026 UCSC General Catalog / Courses / CSE - Computer Science and Engineering / Upper-Division / CSE 107 Computer Science and Engineering CSE 107 Probability and Statistics for Engineers Introduction to fundamental tools of stochastic analysis. Schedule of Courses: Computer Science and Engineering: 2025-2026 *****COURSES ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE***** Click on the section name to visit the web page for that section, or the course name to see all offerings of the course. edu/courses/32038 As the For example, I took CSE 101 with tantalo and even though his lectures were easy to understand and quizzes were super easy, his assignments took a lot of time. Definitely time consuming as CSE 100 took up most of my time during the week (in the later labs I probably spent an average of 20-30 hours on the class). At least that's what I think. One thing to note is that 90% of your grade is exams, but as long as you pay attention during lectures, attend the review ones, and study hard, you should pass. Coursework consists of programming assignments and a final examination. I'm a CE major with 1 quarter to go and I'm taking ECE-103 (Signals & Systems) and CSE-157 (IoT). Its a lot of book work. vywm, z1zc, 7xcq, 4p4sg, mkfw, 8pcc1, w3ok, yaln, djdbzr, khiiqe,