Sounds great, I will keep it in mind if we loosen the web/mobile-native constraint. Or maybe as a direction for campers who take off -- no need then to fret over platform, power will matter.
Thx! On Mon, Jul 6, 2020 at 10:54 AM Stonewall Ballard <sto...@sb.org> wrote: > Ken, > > Are you familiar with Opusmodus? > <http://opusmodus.com> > > It’s written in Clozure ccl, and besides providing an incredible array of > music manipulation functions and structures, it’s got a beautiful window > system. Mac only. > > Your idea of using music as a hook to learn Lisp sounds plausible. Good > Luck! > > - Stoney > ———— > Stonewall Ballard sto...@sb.org http://stoney.sb.org > > On Monday, July 6 at 8:15:31 AM, Ken Tilton (kentil...@gmail.com) wrote: > > So I got to thinking about creating an approachable pathway to IT careers > for anyone really, but in the spirit of today one focused on creating > career opportunities for African Americans. > > The idea would be a code camp developed around algorithmic generation of > music. I know nothing about music theory, except that there is prolly > enough there to introduce most if not all fundamental programming concepts. > > For those campers that accidentally get hooked on programming itself, > which is how many of us ended up in IT careers, away they go! > > The idea is to: > > - use music as the hook; > - defer as long as possible the annoying things about programming (I > am looking at you, node.js); > - part of that ^^^ will be using a powerful language with the > parentheses in the right place, prolly ClojureScript since that could run > where JS runs; > - keep programming as the focus, as tempting as the music will be. > Sonic Pi comes with all sorts of built-in sound capabilities, but we want > to *develop* those in the code camp; > - tailor the program to specific musical genres, to maximize the > musical hook. > > I am dropping this here since I know many Common Lispers have a strong > musical bent. My questions are: > > - Could we use CL instead? I do think this almost has to be a web app, > perhaps even mobile. Hmmm, we *could* CL-ify CLJS with > sufficent clever macrology. > - What do you think? Can a solid programming fundamentals course be > expressed in music theory? Hint: HTTP is not a programming fundamental. > - If there is any interest, what would be a good place for an ongoing > discussion? Google groups? > > Ideas, comments, suggestions all welcome. > > -hk > > -- Kenneth Tilton http://tiltontec.com/