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Cross posted from our friend Aaron Rowe at Wired Science: Forty years ago, researchers developed a programming language that would become a brilliant educational tool. As I remember it, LOGO was a ...
Logo may now be an artifact of the past, but its legacy lives on in Scratch from MIT, coincidentally Logo's birthplace. Scratch is a more visual programming languages that uses blocks, ...
In 1967, Logo was born. It’s a sign of how far things have come since the early days of computer science learning tools.In 1967, the Logo programming language launched, aimed at teaching kids ...
Created by MIT, the Logo Turtle was a three-wheeled machine used to help teach the Logo Programming Language. Children could direct the Turtle, which resembled a moving dome, by inputting computer ...
In brief: Learning a programming language can be tricky, especially for someone new to coding. However, knowing the most popular languages may help some make a critical decision. This choice could ...
From a programming perspective, this is an advanced concept. Most software is still written sequentially, like Logo, with one command running after another, the same way you read a book line by line.
The Logo programming language is a wonderful way to introduce young kids to the art, and science, of programming. For those of you who aren't familiar with Logo, essentially, it's about giving ...
Logo’s a hugely underrated language — underneath the turtle graphics it’s basically a stealth Lisp. It was done a huge disservice by all the 8-bit microcomputer ports that weren’t really ...
NLC, in contrast, leverages NLP technologies and a vast database such as CodeNet to enable anyone to use English, or ultimately French or Chinese or any other natural language, to code.
Forty years ago, researchers developed a programming language that would become a brilliant educational tool. As I remember it, LOGO was a triangular turtle that roamed across the monochrome ...