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Code Nation: Personal Computing and the Learn to Program Movement in America. O'Neill, Kevin (December 2016). "21st century bunkum: What do we value about kids learning to code, and why?". Teacher Learning and Professional Development. 1 (2): 111– 116. Vee, Annett (2017). Coding Literacy: How Computer Programming Is Changing Writing.
Java is a high-level, class-based, object-oriented programming language that is designed to have as few implementation dependencies as possible. It is a general-purpose programming language intended to let programmers write once, run anywhere (), [16] meaning that compiled Java code can run on all platforms that support Java without the need to recompile. [17]
By 2014, Code.org had launched computer courses in thirty US school districts to reach about 5% of all the students in US public schools (about two million students), [46] and by 2015, Code.org had trained about 15,000 teachers to teach computer sciences, able to reach about 600,000 new students previously unable to learn computer coding, with ...
[citation needed] Operator overloading improves readability, [11] so its absence can make Java code less readable, especially for classes representing mathematical objects, such as complex numbers and matrices. Java has only one non-numerical use of an operator: + and += for string concatenation. However, this is implemented by the compiler ...
A small piece of code in most general-purpose programming languages, this program is used to illustrate a language's basic syntax. Such program is often the first written by a student of a new programming language, [ 1 ] but such a program can also be used as a sanity check to ensure that the computer software intended to compile or run source ...
The concept of code blocks it implements is based on MIT's Scratch visual language (listed above). It also permits the use of normal typed code (separate or intermingled) through its own API and the Haxe language. ToonTalk is a language and environment that looks like a video game. Computational abstractions are mapped to concrete analogs such ...
Kids Code Jeunesse (KCJ) is a Canadian (not for profit) organization based in Montreal, Quebec, which helps children in Canada have an opportunity to learn computational thinking through code. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The organization was founded in 2013.
Code Year was a free incentive Codecademy program intended to help people follow through on a New Year's Resolution to learn how to program, by introducing a new course for every week in 2012. [32] Over 450,000 people took courses in 2012, [33] [34] and Codecademy continued the program into 2013. Even though the course is still available, the ...