I'm enjoying "Squeak: Learn Programming with Robots," by Stephane Ducasse. It certainly seems to be a decent place to start.
----- Original Message ---- From: Greg Smith brucegregory@learnblender.com To: beginners@lists.squeakfoundation.org Sent: Sunday, November 5, 2006 2:44:37 PM Subject: [Newbies] The Path From eToys To Squeak To SmallTalk - Or The Other Way
I've been a would be programmer for many years. I'm one of those people who just "does not get it". I understand things like eToys and other visual "programming" environments but have much difficulty making the transition to true programming languages, since they are not visual and usually not very natural, (intuitive), to a visual thinker.
I know that learning SmallTalk would be the next step for me, but there does not seem to be any documentation for the absolute beginner who knows nothing about programming and programming terminology, (classes, methods, functions, etc.). Since SmallTalk makes its claim of being a _/truly/_ object oriented language, and it is at the heart of Squeak, it makes sense for me to move in that direction.
Where does the complete beginner begin with SmallTalk? Too bad that eToys doesn't take the exercise a step further and also take the user from visual programmatic thinking into visual programmatic programming, with learning SmallTalk as its goal.
Thank you,
Greg Smith _______________________________________________ Beginners mailing list Beginners@lists.squeakfoundation.org http://lists.squeakfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/beginners
Thanks
I hope to restart to work on the next one... http://smallwiki.unibe.ch/botsinc/
On 6 nov. 06, at 00:13, Gene Venable wrote:
I'm enjoying "Squeak: Learn Programming with Robots," by Stephane Ducasse. It certainly seems to be a decent place to start.
----- Original Message ---- From: Greg Smith brucegregory@learnblender.com To: beginners@lists.squeakfoundation.org Sent: Sunday, November 5, 2006 2:44:37 PM Subject: [Newbies] The Path From eToys To Squeak To SmallTalk - Or The Other Way
I've been a would be programmer for many years. I'm one of those people who just "does not get it". I understand things like eToys and other visual "programming" environments but have much difficulty making the transition to true programming languages, since they are not visual and usually not very natural, (intuitive), to a visual thinker.
I know that learning SmallTalk would be the next step for me, but there does not seem to be any documentation for the absolute beginner who knows nothing about programming and programming terminology, (classes, methods, functions, etc.). Since SmallTalk makes its claim of being a _/truly/_ object oriented language, and it is at the heart of Squeak, it makes sense for me to move in that direction.
Where does the complete beginner begin with SmallTalk? Too bad that eToys doesn't take the exercise a step further and also take the user from visual programmatic thinking into visual programmatic programming, with learning SmallTalk as its goal.
Thank you,
Greg Smith _______________________________________________ Beginners mailing list Beginners@lists.squeakfoundation.org http://lists.squeakfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/beginners
Beginners mailing list Beginners@lists.squeakfoundation.org http://lists.squeakfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/beginners
beginners@lists.squeakfoundation.org