[Edu-sig] Crunchy Frog (almost) ready for classroom use.
Andre Roberge
andre.roberge at gmail.com
Fri May 5 13:10:21 CEST 2006
The wonders of a good night sleep...
Version 0.2.5 of Crunchy Frog has been release and is on sourceforge
at the usual place (link below in this message).
[snip]
>
> There are three main features left to implement:
>
> 1. add the possibility to load "non-local" html files. This might be
> as easy as adding a couple of lines of code, using a module like
> urllib. When I figure out how to do that, I'll be pestering authors
> of existing Python tutorials to adapt them for use with Crunchy Frog
> ;-)
>
> 2. Fix a major annoyance for "long" pages: at present, when executing
> a code snippet, the page gets reloaded at the very top, even if the
> "editor area" or "fake interpreter prompt" was at the bottom of the
> page. I haven`t been able to find out how to do this using CherryPy.
>
This has been fixed.
> 3. Being able to navigate in an arbitrary directory structure. Up
> until now, I have had problems if the html files were not all in a
> single directory.
>
[snip]
> On 5/4/06, Andre Roberge <andre.roberge at gmail.com> wrote:
> > Version 0.1 of Crunchy Frog has been released. It can be found at
> > https://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=125834
> >
> > Crunchy Frog allows to transform a "traditional" Python tutorial into
> > an interactive session within your favourite web browser. Three
> > "modes" of interaction are currently possible:
> > 1. one-liner, similar to the typical instruction at the Python interpreter.
> > 2. multi-line Python code, as entered in a traditional editor, and
> > executed by Python.
> > 3. Solutions to doctests, as described by Jeff Elkner in a previous post.
> >
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