The pull request looks fine! I really appreciated having an easy, online environment, because I didn't want to spend half of my time getting ghc set up on everyone's machines. Similarly, I think the ease of graphics programming with CodeWorld–and the instant feedback it provides–was a real help in getting people engaged. I used /haskell during my session, but I might switch to the provided haskell dialect if I reprioritize and decide not to teach currying next time. Finally, my brother (more experienced than me with programming, but whose only prior exposure to haskell is me talking about my code and helping me prepare this slidedeck) and I had loads of fun messing around with CodeWorld on our own, unconnected to my CodeDay presentation.
On Friday, 2 December 2016 18:19:18 UTC-8, Chris Smith wrote:
Hi there! If you used CodeWorld for your program, then sure, I'll definitely add you to the list. Can you review the pull request at
https://github.com/google/codeworld/pull/408, and make any corrections or additions? I'll merge once I hear from you that it looks right.
I hope CodeWorld worked out for you. Any experiences to share?
Hello there!
I'm Brendan Murphy, and I taught a 1 hour seminar at the Seattle CodeDay (https://codeday.org, a "hackathon"-type event organized by StudentRND) meant to teach Haskell to an audience of beginner, student programmers. These would be people who'd taken AP CS or Programming 1 in a Java-esque language. I was wondering if I (and StudentRND) could be added to the Users list?
Thanks for the help!
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