Something I learned about at SIGCSE: You can link things to pythontutor.com.  That is a neat site with graphical view of variables and not only single stepping, but back stepping.

The latest derivative of the online book that Jef adapted to Python added such stuff, and added neat tools to embed them in Sphinx document processing software.

http://interactivepython.org/courselib/static/thinkcspy

From PyCon, the latest IPython has a notebook feature for interactive code interspersed with text.

Andy

On Tue, Mar 19, 2013 at 8:18 PM, Karine Laidley <K.Laidley@amsacs.org> wrote:

Dear Python users,

 

I wanted to check with you if you know of a good site that allows students to submit Python code to be checked for correctness. I know there is a codebat site but I found it limited in what it offers. Ideally, I want to offer students problems to solve from simple print statements, to calculations, to formatting, to conditionals and repetitions… even better, if we can actually create our own problem sets and solutions to be checked against, that would be amazing.

 

Any thoughts?

 

Thank you,

 

Karine Laidley

 

Computer Science Teacher (6th and 7th grade)

AMSA Charter School

Marlborough, MA

(508)597-2400

k.laidley@amsacs.org

 


_______________________________________________
Edu-sig mailing list
Edu-sig@python.org
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/edu-sig




--
Dr. Andrew N. Harrington
  Computer Science Department 
  Loyola University Chicago
Lakeshore office in the Math Department: 104 Loyola Hall
http://www.cs.luc.edu/~anh
Phone: 312-915-7999
Fax:    312-915-7998
aharrin@luc.edu