An instructional video to help you get started making a "Rock Paper Scissors" program in Python, like http://openbookproject.net/pybiblio/p.... If you haven't yet made a "Guessing Game, check out this video first: • Python Guessing Game Tutorial
This video won't get you all the way to writing your own Rock, Paper, Scissors game, but it will show you almost everything you need to figure out how to finish it yourself.
Note to the "sit-and-get" haters:
On this YouTube channel, you will find a critique of a Khan Academy instructional video. What, you might say, makes this instructional video on Python programming any different from Khan Academy? Great question!!
I'd argue that "sit-and-get" actually has a role to play in some aspects of education. I make use of instructional videos quite successfully when I want to learn how to use some obscure feature of a computer program I'm not familiar with. Why not use teacher-created videos to do something similar for process-based tasks like computer graphing or even programming?
I feel that programming has a important role to play in science education precisely because of the unique balance between convention/process and conceptual problem solving. Is it possible to outsource one of these aspects without denying students a chance to explore the other? I'm not sure, but it's what I've tried to do here. I'd love your comments on whether I've succeeded or not.
Nesta página do site você pode assistir ao vídeo on-line Python Rock Paper Scissors Tutorial duração online em boa qualidade , que foi baixado pelo usuário Joe Kremer 01 Junho 2012, compartilhe o link com seus amigos e conhecidos, no youtube este vídeo já foi visto 5,554 vezes e gostou 20 espectadores. Boa visualização!