Which kid's beginners programming - Python or Forth?
Erik Max Francis
max at alcyone.com
Wed Jun 29 01:54:02 EDT 2005
BORT wrote:
> In my earlier browsing, I eliminated Logo early on, thinking we would
> hit its capability ceiling too quickly and then backtrack in order to
> make a transition to a "REAL" language.
>
> uh... I've been browsing on Logo tonight and, even without the Lego
> robots, I may go that route. Shoot, I thought Logo was just moving
> hokey sprites in increasingly complex patterns until I saw the book
> list at:
It's probably ideal for ages 7 and 10. Note that even the name _logo_
is Greek for _word_. There's plenty of "non-hokey sprite" stuff you can
do with Logo, it's just that the turtle graphics are the most visually
obvious form of Logo and what most people who had any exposure to Logo
remember most easily. The language itself shares a great deal with Lisp.
There are numerous modern Logo interpreters, so you shouldn't have any
problem finding something both you and the kids can use, like UCBLogo
for Unix or MSWLogo for Windows (based on UCBLogo). If you want to go
that route, there's even a set of computer science texts based on Logo,
called _Computer Science Logo Style_ by Brian Harvey, maintainer of UCBLogo.
--
Erik Max Francis && max at alcyone.com && http://www.alcyone.com/max/
San Jose, CA, USA && 37 20 N 121 53 W && AIM erikmaxfrancis
Does the true light / Of love come in flashes
-- Sandra St. Victor
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