| Accessories By Manufacturer | |
|
|
Email Newsletter
Get info on Sales, Events, New Products, and More!
|
|
|
|
|
| Learning to Program with Alice | 
enlarge | Authors: Wanda P. Dann, Stephen Cooper, Randy Pausch Publisher: Prentice Hall Category: Book
List Price: $58.00 Buy Used: $6.99 You Save: $51.01 (88%)
New (21) Used (68) from $6.99
Avg. Customer Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 120882
Media: Paperback Edition: Pap/Cdr Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 375 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4 Dimensions (in): 9.9 x 7.7 x 0.7
ISBN: 0131872893 Dewey Decimal Number: 006 EAN: 9780131872899 ASIN: 0131872893
Publication Date: July 25, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Since we sell hundreds of books a week I cannot guarantee that your book will be free of highlighting, will not have bent corners and will have CD. However, we do try our best to catagorize inventory properly. Our books may have bent corners and minor highlighting. Most do not but some do. We will try our best to make sure you get a good quality book but sometimes a bad one does sneak through. Please contact me if you think something has not been catagorized properly. We only sell U.S. Editions. If it does not say U.S. edition it is probably a cheap international edition that will not work for your class - no matter what they say. Since we sell hundreds of books a week I cannot guarantee that your book will be free of highlighting, will not have bent corners and will have CD. However, we do try our best to catagorize inventory properly. Our books may have bent corners and minor highlighting. Most do not but some do. We will try our best to make sure you get a good quality
|
| Also Available In:
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description
This guide supports an innovative approach to fundamental programming concepts. The authors use program visualization to create an easy relationship between program construct and the animation action in a 3D world. Final release is in full color. For consistency with Java, C++, and other commonly used languages, "questions" are now "functions." Save and reload bugs have been fixed. Fonts can be scaled larger or smaller. High contrast mode is available for projection in the classroom. A much larger local gallery is now loaded with Alice; the CD with the book contains the complete gallery, so Internet access for downloading 3D models is no longer required. A useful how-to guide for programmers interested in learning Alice.
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 2 more reviews...
Great service but misread item March 15, 2008 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
I got the books quickly and in good shape. However, I did not see the Brief Edition explanation. The brief only has 5 of the 10 chapters. If I had seen this I would have ordered the full version.
Useless ... for a basic programmer January 28, 2008 0 out of 3 found this review helpful
If you know the ABCs of programming already, this book is useless for you. Alice is soooo simple, it's absolutely easy for you to figure out on your own how each element in Alice works. On the other hand, if you don't know what "Java" or "C++" is, ummm ... buy this book.
Actually, even if you don't know any programming language at all, but are moderately smart, you can figure out how Alice works since Alice has an inbuilt tutorial, which is fairly simple to follow and covers almost everything you need to know in Alice. (The rest 20% that is left out in the tutorial, you can figure out by trial and error.)
Doesn't Teach Alice At All December 7, 2007 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
I will admit, there are some good definitions in here for the different concepts in programming. However, this is NOT a good way to actually learn Alice.
The exercises are not explained in the text unless they are an extension of the chapter problem. The text teaches very little about how to use Alice. If the Alice interface wasn't so clunky, it would be easy to figure out. None of the examples relate to any of the actual exercises. A case in point is the fish problem in chapter 2. There is no explanation given on how a fish can supposedly "jump" in Alice.
The CD does not include a Mac version of Alice. If the computers being used in a course do not have internet connectivity, this is a problem for Mac users. Also, the index is poor and there is no glossary.
Don't waste your money on this excuse for a programming manual. Get yourself a real textbook on the subject.
Used it as textbook. Excellent! July 20, 2007 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
"One of Alice's real strengths is that it has been able to make abstract concepts concrete in the eyes of first- time programmers. " - Forward to the book.
I used this book as a textbook in a one-semester introduction to programming course in my high school. I intend to use it again next year. Here is why:
Each chapter begins with a motivational overview of the chapter's topic and end with exercises and projects. Storyboards are used to provide an algorithmic step-by-step description of the example animation. Screenshots of code and visual setting allowed students to recreate and closely follow the covered topic.
Student had their copies of the book open next to their workstations. Throughout the course, they were focused, on task and having fun. This made my experience teaching the course very rewarding. Answers to end of chapter exercises, projects and instructional support material are available to instructors on [..]
With no hesitation I give it 5 stars. M. Kadri (High School Teacher, New York, NY USA)
Excellent Textbook January 16, 2007 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
I used this book as a textbook in a 'Programming with Multimedia Projects' college class. I thought it was very easy to understand, and I liked the way the material is presented: Using the Alice program (included on a CD-ROM with the book), each chapter walks you through each new topic in a few different 'lab exercises'. You are then able to apply what you have learned to 'project questions' at the end of each chapter. The only problem would be that if you are not part of a class when you are going through this book, questions would remain unanswered as there are no solutions in the back of the book (such as all odd-numbered questions, etc.). I believe it would be difficult for some to use this book as a stand-alone learning tool.
|
|
| Site by: Troy Peterson | |