Web Programming Code:  22.612    :  6
View general information   Description   The subject within the syllabus as a whole   Prior knowledge   Learning objectives and results   Content   View the UOC learning resources used in the subject   Guidelines on assessment at the UOC   View the assessment model  
This is the course plan for the first semester of the academic year 2024/2025. To check whether the course is being run this semester, go to the Virtual Campus section More UOC / The University / Programmes of study section on Campus. Once teaching starts, you'll be able to find it in the classroom. The course plan may be subject to change.
The Web Programming course introduces the student to the world of front-end development, the part of the creation of web applications that runs in the user's browser. To do so, the course builds on the programming knowledge acquired in the Fundamentals of Programming course and deepens it using JavaScript as a language. 

The main objective of the course is to provide the student with the necessary tools to start developing front-end applications, while going in depth in programming skills and abilities. 

The course also provides an introduction to TypeScript, a free and open source programming language, which is a superset of JavaScript and is increasingly used in the world of web development.

Amunt

This course is part of the group of courses that work on software development and, more specifically, applied programming.

Amunt

To take this course it is necessary to have previously taken the Fundamentals of Programming and Web Standards and Languages courses, since the skills acquired in both will be essential to work on this course’s competences.

Amunt

  • To know the JavaScript scripting language and to know how to make programs with it.
  • To know the basics of Object Oriented Programming and how it is used in the JavaScript language.
  • To know the objects that form the web browsers’ document object model and their manipulation using JavaScript.
  • To learn how to create dynamic web pages using the JavaScript language.
  • To understand the differences between JavaScript and TypeScript and to be able to develop TypeScript applications.

Amunt

  1. Fundamentals of JavaScript programming
  2. The DOM, events and object orientation 
  3. JavaScript APIs and libraries
  4. TypeScript

Amunt

The assessment process is based on students' own work and the assumption that this work is original and has been carried out by them.

In assessment activities, the following irregular behaviours, among others, may have serious academic and disciplinary consequences: someone else being involved in carrying out the student's assessment test or activity, or the work being not entirely original; copying another's work or committing plagiarism; attempting to cheat to obtain better academic results; collaborating in, covering up or encouraging copying; or using unauthorized material, software or devices during assessment.

If students are caught engaging in any of these irregular behaviours, they may receive a fail mark (D/0) for the assessable activities set out in the course plan (including the final tests) or in the final mark for the course. This could be because they have used unauthorized materials, software or devices (e.g. social networking sites or internet search engines) during the tests, because they have copied text fragments from an external source (internet, notes, books, articles, other student's projects or activities, etc.) without correctly citing the source, or because they have engaged in any other irregular conduct.

In accordance with the UOC's academic regulations , irregular conduct during assessment, besides leading to a failing mark for the course, may be grounds for disciplinary proceedings and, where appropriate, the corresponding punishment, as established in the UOC's coexistence regulations.

In its assessment process, the UOC reserves the right to:

  • Ask the student to provide proof of their identity, as established in the university's academic regulations.
  • Request that students provide evidence of the authorship of their work, throughout the assessment process, both in continuous and final assessment, by means of an oral test or by whatever other synchronous or asynchronous means the UOC specifies. These means will check students' knowledge and competencies to verify authorship of their work, and under no circumstances will they constitute a second assessment. If it is not possible to guarantee the student's authorship, they will receive a D grade in the case of continuous assessment or a Fail in the case of final assessment.

    For this purpose, the UOC may require that students use a microphone, webcam or other devices during the assessment process, in which case it will be the student's responsibility to check that such devices are working correctly.

Amunt

You can only pass the course if you participate in and pass the continuous assessment. Your final mark for the course will be the mark you received in the continuous assessment.

 

Amunt