I can't wait to watch my daughter open her gifts later. My big gift to her is her first computer :D
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I can't wait to watch my daughter open her gifts later. My big gift to her is her first computer :D
Merry Christmas everyone. Stay stafe and have fun.
Thankfully my daughter isn't quite there yet but she is getting close. At 2 she already wants to sit with me while I program (not at all a good idea since she randomly pushes keyboard keys), and the first thing she does when she comes into our room is play with the mouse and click the buttons. Very soon old dad is going to have to spring for a new computer for the girl.Quote:
I can't wait to watch my daughter open her gifts later. My big gift to her is her first computer
Be assured though I will bring her up and teach her in the ways of uber nerdness.
You've done well young Jedi. :)Quote:
[Proud Daddy] My little girl asked me to teach her how to program her new computer
Certainly, do not ignore such a request.
I am the programmer I am today because my mother took several Pascal programming courses in the early 1980's. She bought several games for her Commodore 64 for my brother and me to play. I quickly became much more interested in the "blue screen" (C64 BASIC prompt which appears on boot-up) than the games themselves.
I was dissing on BASIC in another thread. It may be a crappy language but it kickstarted my career, even though I didn't realize it for another 12 years.
Yeah, I'm torn on whether to start her on BASIC, or just jump right into teaching her C/C++. BASIC is a lot easier to grasp, but I think either one will be about the same to a 7 year old and if she gets started in C/C++ it might be better in the long run. Then again, for teh stuff she will be doing like printing her name etc, cout is probably easier to learn than the PRINT command.
What about teaching her programming using Python? Admittedly, I make this suggestion motivated less by pedagogical concerns than by a joke that involves a little girl and a python:Quote:
Originally Posted by abachler
Quote:
A little girl goes into a pet show and asks for a wabbit. The shop keeper looks down at her, smiles and says:
"Would you like a lovely fluffy little white rabbit, or a cutesy wootesly little brown rabbit?"
"Actually", says the little girl, "I don't think my python would notice."