(05 April, 2022 - 11:01 AM)Instagram Wrote: Show More
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* THIS COURSE COVERS GAME DEVELOPMENT IN SCRATCH 3.0, KODU AND CODING PRINCIPLES TO FILL THE GAP BETWEEN SCRATCH 3.0 AND REAL CODING *
In this course you will be able to develop games in Scratch 3.0 programming language and 3D games in Kodu Game Lab. For the development of these games, is used Scratch 3.0 and Kodu Game Lab because they are educational programming environments that have an easy graphical interface that it will allow us to drag and drop the right blocks of coding. I promise you that it will be a funny and exciting course that it will motivate you to learn coding in more depth.
Scratch 3.0 is a free programming language and online community where you can create your own interactive stories, games, and animations. Using Scratch, users can create online projects and develop them into almost anything by using a simple block-like interface. When they are ready, they then share, and also discuss their creations with each other. Scratch 3.0 was developed by the Lifelong Kindergarten group at the MIT Media Lab. Scratch 3.0 is designed to help children (ages 8 and up) learn to utilize their imaginations, practice common sense, and, most importantly, to interact with computers.
From Game Development with Scratch and Kodu Game Lab to Real coding with Python
Block #1: Basic Concepts Objectives covered by the block
fundamental concepts: interpreting and the interpreter, compilation and the compiler, language elements, lexis, syntax and semantics, Python keywords, instructions, indenting
Block #4: Data Collections – Lists, Tuples, and Dictionaries Objectives covered by the block (7 items)
simple lists: constructing vectors, indexing and slicing, the len() function
lists in detail: indexing, slicing, basic methods (append(), insert(), index()) and functions (len(), sorted(), etc.), del instruction, iterating lists with the for loop, initializing, in and not in operators, list comprehension, copying and cloning
lists in lists: matrices and cubes
tuples: indexing, slicing, building, immutability
tuples vs. lists: similarities and differences, lists inside tuples and tuples inside lists
dictionaries: building, indexing, adding and removing keys, iterating through dictionaries as well as their keys and values, checking key existence, keys(), items() and values() methods
strings in detail: escaping using the \ character, quotes and apostrophes inside strings, multiline strings, basic string functions.
Block #5: Functions (20%) Objectives covered by the block (6 items)
defining and invoking your own functions and generators
return and yield keywords, returning results,
the None keyword,
recursion
parameters vs. arguments,
positional keyword and mixed argument passing,
default parameter values
converting generator objects into lists using the list() function
name scopes, name hiding (shadowing), the global keyword
So What Are You Waiting For? Enroll Today!
Who this course is for:
Anyone who wants to learn to code easily by creating a game.
Beginners who have never programmed before in Scratch.
Students that want to learn difficult programming concepts by having fun using their creativity.
(05 April, 2022 - 11:01 AM)Instagram Wrote: Show More
Don't forget to LIKE the thread please
All coupons are date and user limited, be fast!
Show ContentSpoiler:
* THIS COURSE COVERS GAME DEVELOPMENT IN SCRATCH 3.0, KODU AND CODING PRINCIPLES TO FILL THE GAP BETWEEN SCRATCH 3.0 AND REAL CODING *
In this course you will be able to develop games in Scratch 3.0 programming language and 3D games in Kodu Game Lab. For the development of these games, is used Scratch 3.0 and Kodu Game Lab because they are educational programming environments that have an easy graphical interface that it will allow us to drag and drop the right blocks of coding. I promise you that it will be a funny and exciting course that it will motivate you to learn coding in more depth.
Scratch 3.0 is a free programming language and online community where you can create your own interactive stories, games, and animations. Using Scratch, users can create online projects and develop them into almost anything by using a simple block-like interface. When they are ready, they then share, and also discuss their creations with each other. Scratch 3.0 was developed by the Lifelong Kindergarten group at the MIT Media Lab. Scratch 3.0 is designed to help children (ages 8 and up) learn to utilize their imaginations, practice common sense, and, most importantly, to interact with computers.
From Game Development with Scratch and Kodu Game Lab to Real coding with Python
Block #1: Basic Concepts Objectives covered by the block
fundamental concepts: interpreting and the interpreter, compilation and the compiler, language elements, lexis, syntax and semantics, Python keywords, instructions, indenting
Block #4: Data Collections – Lists, Tuples, and Dictionaries Objectives covered by the block (7 items)
simple lists: constructing vectors, indexing and slicing, the len() function
lists in detail: indexing, slicing, basic methods (append(), insert(), index()) and functions (len(), sorted(), etc.), del instruction, iterating lists with the for loop, initializing, in and not in operators, list comprehension, copying and cloning
lists in lists: matrices and cubes
tuples: indexing, slicing, building, immutability
tuples vs. lists: similarities and differences, lists inside tuples and tuples inside lists
dictionaries: building, indexing, adding and removing keys, iterating through dictionaries as well as their keys and values, checking key existence, keys(), items() and values() methods
strings in detail: escaping using the \ character, quotes and apostrophes inside strings, multiline strings, basic string functions.
Block #5: Functions (20%) Objectives covered by the block (6 items)
defining and invoking your own functions and generators
return and yield keywords, returning results,
the None keyword,
recursion
parameters vs. arguments,
positional keyword and mixed argument passing,
default parameter values
converting generator objects into lists using the list() function
name scopes, name hiding (shadowing), the global keyword
So What Are You Waiting For? Enroll Today!
Who this course is for:
Anyone who wants to learn to code easily by creating a game.
Beginners who have never programmed before in Scratch.
Students that want to learn difficult programming concepts by having fun using their creativity.