PGCPS Match Game
Posted: Fri May 08, 2020 10:30 am
I postet the following post about a week ago in the "Beginner" section and had no answers. Maybe it should be here, as it's about teaching LiveCode:
For many years Cyril Pruszko used LiveCode in the school until his retirement. He has documented a large part of his lessons on the Internet; a great treasure: https://sites.google.com/a/pgcps.org/livecode/
I have now come across an exercise there, where I am stuck (and it's just one of the few that are only partially documented).
The Match Game*. The idea is that the children check and complete the given code.
Either it is really extremely difficult (which I don't believe) or I am struck by blindness or after x attempts I just go round in circles. Has anyone here ever programmed such a game and could help me? (There is a similar game here in the forum with code to download, but it has a completely different approach behind it). Maybe I just didn't try enough, but computer science is one of twelve school subjects I have to teach, and now with home schooling (a.k.a video conferencing), preparation takes twice as long and I still have to coach the overstrained parents.
I'm grateful for any advice. Or is there a finished version for code analysis somewhere?
Stay in good health and best regards,
G.
* https://sites.google.com/a/pgcps.org/li ... e/matching
For many years Cyril Pruszko used LiveCode in the school until his retirement. He has documented a large part of his lessons on the Internet; a great treasure: https://sites.google.com/a/pgcps.org/livecode/
I have now come across an exercise there, where I am stuck (and it's just one of the few that are only partially documented).
The Match Game*. The idea is that the children check and complete the given code.
Either it is really extremely difficult (which I don't believe) or I am struck by blindness or after x attempts I just go round in circles. Has anyone here ever programmed such a game and could help me? (There is a similar game here in the forum with code to download, but it has a completely different approach behind it). Maybe I just didn't try enough, but computer science is one of twelve school subjects I have to teach, and now with home schooling (a.k.a video conferencing), preparation takes twice as long and I still have to coach the overstrained parents.
I'm grateful for any advice. Or is there a finished version for code analysis somewhere?
Stay in good health and best regards,
G.
* https://sites.google.com/a/pgcps.org/li ... e/matching