[Python-checkins] Doc: Correct the creation year and the credits of the Logo Programming language (GH-13520)
Miss Islington (bot)
webhook-mailer at python.org
Sat Jun 1 07:47:20 EDT 2019
https://github.com/python/cpython/commit/fc914dd5e03db9188b6d28d1c48574dc78ee4325
commit: fc914dd5e03db9188b6d28d1c48574dc78ee4325
branch: 3.7
author: Miss Islington (bot) <31488909+miss-islington at users.noreply.github.com>
committer: GitHub <noreply at github.com>
date: 2019-06-01T04:47:15-07:00
summary:
Doc: Correct the creation year and the credits of the Logo Programming language (GH-13520)
(cherry picked from commit 66501058fef76a5d77e6879f6da3282f0a9eef1b)
Co-authored-by: Stéphane Wirtel <stephane at wirtel.be>
files:
M Doc/library/turtle.rst
diff --git a/Doc/library/turtle.rst b/Doc/library/turtle.rst
index 175010b89906..5d7f0608aebb 100644
--- a/Doc/library/turtle.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/turtle.rst
@@ -20,8 +20,8 @@ Introduction
============
Turtle graphics is a popular way for introducing programming to kids. It was
-part of the original Logo programming language developed by Wally Feurzig and
-Seymour Papert in 1966.
+part of the original Logo programming language developed by Wally Feurzeig,
+Seymour Papert and Cynthia Solomon in 1967.
Imagine a robotic turtle starting at (0, 0) in the x-y plane. After an ``import turtle``, give it the
command ``turtle.forward(15)``, and it moves (on-screen!) 15 pixels in the
More information about the Python-checkins
mailing list