Guido van Robot: Difference between revisions

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== About GvR ==
== About GvR ==
Guido van Robot is a localized minimalistic programming language providing just enough syntax to help students
Guido van Robot is a localized minimalistic programming language providing just enough syntax to help students learn the concepts of sequencing, conditional branching, looping and procedural abstraction. Its biggest strength is that it permits this learning in an environment that combines the thrill of problem-solving with instant visual feedback. In short, it is an interactive, introductory programming language that is excellent for learning the basic concepts of programming, applicable in any high-level language. Best of all, it's a whole lot of fun, too!
learn the concepts of sequencing, conditional branching, looping and procedural abstraction.
Its biggest strength is that it permits this learning in an environment that combines the thrill of problem-solving
with instant visual feedback. In short, it is an interactive, introductory programming language that is excellent
for learning the basic concepts of programming, applicable in any high-level language.
Best of all, it's a whole lot of fun, too!


At this point, you are probably asking yourself, What is GvR, specifically? The gist of it is that it is a robot represented by a triangle on the screen that moves around in a world made up of streets and avenues, walls and beepers, which Guido can collect or set. His actions are completely guided by a program written by the user.
At this point, you are probably asking yourself, What is GvR, specifically?
The gist of it is that it is a robot represented by a triangle on the screen that moves around in a world made
up of streets and avenues, walls and beepers, which Guido can collect or set.
His actions are completely guided by a program written by the user.


One other item of interest about GvR is that it is a student-created project. GvR was initially written by students at Yorktown High School in Arlington, Virginia, with the help of professional programmers serving as mentors. You can navigate to the History page to learn more about this part of the project.
One other item of interest about GvR is that it is a student-created project.
GvR was initially written by students at Yorktown High School in Arlington, Virginia, with the help of
professional programmers serving as mentors.
You can navigate to the History page to learn more about this part of the project.


== Lessons ==
== Lessons ==
A complete introductory programming unit which you can access here:
A complete introductory programming unit which you can access here:
[http://gvr.sourceforge.net/lessons/rfrank SourceForge:gvr lessons]
[http://gvr.sourceforge.net/lessons/rfrank SourceForge:gvr lessons]



== See also ==
== See also ==

Revision as of 09:59, 24 July 2007

Guido van Robot (GvR)
Activity-gvr.png
Status: Stable
Version: 2.3
Base:
Source: SourceForge:gvr-xo
l10n: missing
Contributors
See project website
A screenshot of GvR

Guido van Robot, or GvR for short, is a programming language and free software application designed to introduce beginners to the fundamentals of programming.

About GvR

Guido van Robot is a localized minimalistic programming language providing just enough syntax to help students learn the concepts of sequencing, conditional branching, looping and procedural abstraction. Its biggest strength is that it permits this learning in an environment that combines the thrill of problem-solving with instant visual feedback. In short, it is an interactive, introductory programming language that is excellent for learning the basic concepts of programming, applicable in any high-level language. Best of all, it's a whole lot of fun, too!

At this point, you are probably asking yourself, What is GvR, specifically? The gist of it is that it is a robot represented by a triangle on the screen that moves around in a world made up of streets and avenues, walls and beepers, which Guido can collect or set. His actions are completely guided by a program written by the user.

One other item of interest about GvR is that it is a student-created project. GvR was initially written by students at Yorktown High School in Arlington, Virginia, with the help of professional programmers serving as mentors. You can navigate to the History page to learn more about this part of the project.

Lessons

A complete introductory programming unit which you can access here: SourceForge:gvr lessons

See also