It's Time for Every Student to Learn to Code (article, Code.org)
Introduction to Programming (Eli The Computer Guy)
Coding Resources
Cloud 9: https://c9.io/
Desktop & Mobile HTML5 game Framework: http://phaser.io/
MIT App Inventor
(Note: The Harvard MOOC & the MIT Scratch sites require users to set up free accounts)
Take a CS50 Course at HarvardX!
https://www.edx.org/course/introduction-computer-science-harvardx-cs50x
https://learn-computer-programming.zeef.com/katie.williams
Careers:
Other:
http://ampsoft.net/ - freeware utilities and games
https://archive.org/ - WayBack Machine
Dear Fellow Students:
For coding beginners, I recommend using the Mozilla Thimble IDE, it allows you to code, and run your projects within your browser. You can also use it with CSS, and Java. http://thimble.mozilla.org (web)
Other favorite compilers of mine are as follows:
https://orionhub.org/ for Javascript (web)
https://eclipse.org/che/ for HTML, CSS, Javascript, and many other languages (once downloaded, it's cloud enabled)
http://pythonfiddle.com/ for Python coding (web)
https://www.jetbrains.com/ruby/ for coding in Ruby (30-day free trial) (web)
https://netbeans.org/ for C/C++, Java, Ruby, PHP and more; written in JS and made by Oracle (offline)
Coding language plugins for Netbeans http://plugins.netbeans.org/PluginPortal/
My ALLTIME favorite compiler:
http://www.geany.org/Download/Releases for C, C++, C#, Java, JavaScript, PHP, HTML, LaTeX, CSS, Python, Perl, Ruby and others. It keeps track of your code segments and color codes, so you don't get lost if you're writing a long script. And it's free.
There are also a myriad of different resources other than Codecademy to learn how to code, if the feel of Codeacademy.com isn't for you.
I recommend the following:
https://dash.generalassemb.ly/ to code webpages and learn HTML
http://thecodeplayer.com/ to learn HTML5 through awesome walkthroughs
http://www.checkio.org/ to learn HTML
http://www.programmr.com/ to learn HTML/CSS and 13 other programming languages through games, and competitions.
The Hour of Code powerpoint is a statistical presentation formulated by HP during the National Computer Science Week about why Computer Science should be taught in more schools-- very informational for people who want to become programmers or want to try out coding.
In addition to this lengthy email... You can give any students who have an interest in coding my QR code, or email. Feel free to attach it, and link my emails to your google site. They can catch me here, at phinalt@outlook.com (student) or josephinedev@mail.com (professional).
Josie J. '16