tetox Posted July 2, 2019 #1 Posted July 2, 2019 (edited) Hidden Content Give reaction to this post to see the hidden content. Book: How to Be a Coder: Learn to Think like a Coder with Fun Activities, then Code in Scratch 3.0 Online Author(s): Kiki Prottsman Publisher: DK Children Tags: Programming Languages, Coding, Debugging. Year: 1st Edition (July 2, 2019) Print Length: 144 pages Format: PDF (True) Language: English ISBN-10: 1465478817 ISBN-13: 9781465478818 Size: 41.0 MB (RAR) About this book: Learn to think like a coder without a computer! Each of the fun craft activities included in this book will teach you about a key concept of computer programming and can be done completely offline. Then you can put your skills into practice by trying out the simple programs provided in the online, child-friendly computer language Scratch. This crafty coding book breaks down the principles of coding into bite-sized chunks that will get you thinking like a computer scientist in no time. Learn about loops by making a friendship bracelet, find out about programming by planning a scavenger hunt, and discover how functions work with paper fortune tellers. Children can then use their new knowledge to code for real by following the clear instructions to build programs in Scratch 3.0. Perfect for kids aged 7-9, the Nirvanarious STEAM activities will help teach children the crucial skills of logical thinking that will give them a head-start for when they begin programming on a computer. Famous scientist pages teach children about coding pioneers, such as Alan Turing and Katherine Johnson, and topic pages, such as the Internet, give kids a wider understanding of the subject. Written by computer science expert Kiki Prottsman, How to be a Coder is so much fun kids won't realize they're learning! Contents: How the book works Getting ready CRAFTY CODING Origami algorithm Ada Lovelace Paper pixels Scavenger hunt program Debugging drawings Loopy orchestra Creative outlines Games Illustration collaboration Persistence pointing Conditional questions The if/else dance Alan Turing Balloon events Input/output recipe Hardware Catch me collisions Nirvanariable paper chain Fortune-teller function Katherine Johnson Parameter path Decompose a castle Pattern matching creepy-crawlies Abstraction story Remixing rhymes The internet COMPUTER CODING Getting Scratch Using Scratch Coding in Scratch Sprites Algorithms Programming languages Coding programs Debugging Loops Creativity Collaboration Persistence Conditionals If/else Events Input/output Collisions Nirvanariables Satoru Iwata Functions Functions with parameters Decomposition Pattern matching Abstraction Bill Gates Remixing Minicomputers micro:bit Answers Did you know? Glossary Index Acknowledgments Hidden Content Give reaction to this post to see the hidden content. Thanks to the one who initially shared the file. Edited February 20, 2020 by Bad Karma Dead links removed 1
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