Off to a couple baby steps with Scratch Programming.
Long story short, you drag and drop blocks into programs. There are blocks for moving little guys around the screen, printing, drawing, control structures and the rest.
You set up a free account, and your code is stored out there on the Internet, so you can mess around with Scratch from whatever computer is handy. Looks to be an off-line editor as well.
If you get a good program, you can save it for later use. And share it with others.
Get started at scratch.mit.edu
There are some YouTube videos to get you started as well.
http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=Scratch+programming&sm=12
Scott
Popular Posts
-
... On the Raspberry Pi http://www.raspberrypi.org/about http://www.mcmelectronics.com/content/en-US/raspberry-pi ... Using the ...
-
Tonight's project , a variation on the morse code stuff I was doing a while back. I can't "read" Morse Code naturally. ...
-
Something that we have sitting out in the garage is a Raspberry Pi. It's hooked up to the Kantronics KPC-3 TNC through a USB hub and a U...
-
After dropping my son off at school, I had breakfast with the gang from the Broken Arrow Amateur Radio Club at the Kenosha Cafe. Guy had ...
-
Off to a couple baby steps with Scratch Programming. Long story short, you drag and drop blocks into programs. There are blocks for movin...
-
Today's pic of the day is the Arduino Due I grafted on to the old Radio Shack Sensor Lab. It doesn't look like much , but it should...
-
Hello World. More to follow. Scott
-
What's on tap for tonight ? I'd like to look into the Scratch programming language and see how hard it is to make simple graphics, ...
-
Very simple Arduino code just to check out the board ... You can see how easy it is to use the digital I/O and the serial port .
Thursday, December 12, 2013
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment