disclaimer

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The {\bf code} and the {\bf presentation} should be uploaded to
ILIAS before the presentations start on Thursday. Everything
should be bundeled into a {\em single} zip-file. The
presentation should be handed in as pdf.
ILIAS at latest on Thursday, November 6th, 12:00h.
The presentations start on Thursday 13:00h. Please hand in
your presentation as a pdf file. Bundle everything into a
{\em single} zip-file.
\vspace{.5cm}
The {\bf code} should be exectuable without any further
adjustments from us. This means that you should include all
adjustments from us. This means that you need to include all
additional functions you wrote and the data into the
zip-file. The {\em main script} should produce the same {\em
figures} that you use in your slides. The figures should follow
the guidelines for proper plotting as discussed in the first
statistics lecture. The code should be properly commented and
comprehensible by third persons (use proper and consistent
zip-file. A single {\em main script} should produce the same
{\em figures} that you use in your slides. The figures should
follow the guidelines for proper plotting as discussed in the
first statistics lecture. The code should be properly commented
and comprehensible by third persons (use proper and consistent
variable names).
\vspace{.5cm} \textbf{Please write your name and matriculation
number as a comment at the top of a script called \texttt{main.m}!}
The \texttt{main.m} script then should call all your scripts.
\vspace{.5cm}
The {\bf slides} should be handed in along with the code and in
pdf format. We will store them all on one computer to allow fast
transitions between talks. The {\bf presentation} itself should
be {\em at most} 10min long and be held in English. In the
presentation you should (i) briefly describe the problem, (ii)
explain how you solved it algorithmically (don't show your
entire code), and (iii) present figures showing your results.
The {\bf presentation} should be {\em at most} 10min long and be
held in English. In the presentation you should (i) briefly
describe the problem, (ii) explain how you solved it
algorithmically (don't show your entire code), and (iii) present
figures showing your results. We will store all presentations on
one computer to allow fast transitions between talks.
}}