dont laugh
Ian Hobson
ian.hobson at ntlworld.com
Fri Sep 1 19:52:00 EDT 2000
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Fri Sep 1 19:52:00 EDT 2000
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In article <G06pwL.DFF at world.std.com>, Will Ware <wware at world.std.com> writes >Jason Cunliffe (jasonic at nomadicsltd.com) wrote: >> A lot of what mars many training video are basic film making mistakes: >> lousy sound, poor focus... > >> I just finished watching ome video of a conference... >> programmers navigating around their source files... > >This addresses my concern about video resolution. If source code is >legible, that's the main thing. > >OK, I'm convinced, video is the way to go. Can you suggest any URLs >about good video technique, and particularly getting good screenshots? > >As far as doing a good job of representing the Pythonic mindset, a >couple possibilities come to mind. One would be to ask the expert to Not so fast. Jason was right - it is the FIRST 2 hours that are vital, not the rest of the course. Python MUST run "out of the box" (even on win32 - which it does not) and then the ideas can be explained. I'm now past my first python prog. The MAJOR hurdles that I have crossed include a) Understanding that "Name error" meant I had forgotten an import line. b) Understanding that syntax error meant I had missed a : c) Getting the resulting program to run from the start menu! I STILL do not know what the IDLE main screen is for - I have NOT used it. And I'm not a newbie to programming - my first program compiled in 1966, from paper tape! I have earned a good living at it since 1974. >construct good and bad examples, and explain what makes the good ones >better. (In some cases, it might make sense to present a sequence of >examples, going from horrible to adequate to elegant.) > >The other possibility is to record an instance where the expert is >teaching somebody of lesser expertise. Hopefully the student will ask >all the questions that the viewer would want to ask if he were there. Regards Ian Ian Hobson Every time we teach a child something, we prevent him from inventing it himself. - Jean Piaget
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