[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Kirby said: > >> Just thinking out loud here. One of our Shuttleworth Summit attenders >> was going back to Cape Town with Imagine Logo, a somewhat expensive >> commercial Logo aimed at the kid market (I guess that's redundant: >> Logo is by definition aimed at kids, no?). > > I'd like to first point out that Logo is not used by just kids for just > playing around. We use NetLogo in a few of the college courses that I > teach to do serious playing around. NetLogo is great, and has some things > that I wish Python had. NetLogo is not a visual programming environment, > but has a drag-n-drop work area for adding inputs (buttons, sliders) and > outputs (graphs). A very nice tool indeed.
Rebol (http://www.rebol.com/) is a Logo for adults. They don't say so, but it is Logo. Well, at least if you define Logo as "lisp without parenthesis" (well, it's Rebol's a bit more Logo-like than *just* that, but that's kind of the core of it). -- Ian Bicking | [EMAIL PROTECTED] | http://blog.ianbicking.org _______________________________________________ Edu-sig mailing list [email protected] http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/edu-sig
