Turtle Blocks is an activity with a Logo-inspired graphical "turtle" that draws colorful art based on snap-together visual programming elements. Its "low floor" provides an easy entry point for beginners. It also has "high ceiling" programming, graphics, mathematics, and Computer Science features which will challenge the more adventurous student.
Note: The JavaScript version of Turtle Blocks closely parallels the Python version of Turtle Blocks, which is included in the Sugar distribution. Sugar users probably want to use the Python version rather than the JavaScript version. (The JavaScript version is included in Sugarizer.)
The Javascript version of Turtle Blocks is designed to run in a browser. Most of the development has been done in Chrome, but it should also work in Firefox, Opera, and Safari. You can run it directly from index.html, from a server maintained by Sugar Labs, from the github repo, or by setting up a local server.
Sugar users can run Turtle Blocks as an app embedded in the Browse activity (See Turtle Blocks Embedded) or simply open Turtle Blocks in the Browse activity itself.
Once you've launched Turtle Blocks in your browser, start by clicking on (or dragging) blocks from the Turtle palette. Use multiple blocks to create drawings; as the turtle moves under your control, colorful lines are drawn.
You add blocks to your program by clicking on or dragging them from the palette to the main area. You can delete a block by dragging it back onto the palette. Click anywhere on a “stack” of blocks to start executing that stack or by clicking in the Big Play Button (fast running) or press it for a long while for the Turtle to run (slowly) on the Main Toolbar.
The basic buttons and basic blocks are explained in detail in Documentation.
A guide to programming with Turtle Blocks is available in Turtle Blocks Guide.
A quick start:
Click to run the project at full speed.
Stop the current project running.
Under the secondary menu there are additional play buttons.
Click to run the project slowly.
Click to run the project step by step.
Use advanced mode to expose many additional blocks and features.
There are some buttons at the top of the canvas:
The Show (or hide) grid button will display a pie menu with a variety of grid options. The Erase button will clear the screen and return the turtles to the center of the screen. The Screen button will shrink (or expand) the graphics area.
There are some buttons on the bottom of the canvas:
The Home buttom returns the blocks the center of the screen. The Hide button hides (or reveals) the blocks. The Collapse button collapses (or expands) stacks of blocks. The Shrink and Grow buttons change the size of the blocks.Some basic blocks include:
Turns turtle clockwise (angle in degrees).
Sets color of the line drawn by the turtle.
Sets size of the line drawn by the turtle.
Loops specified number of times.
Google Code-in participant Jasmine Park has created some guides to using Turtle Blocks: Turtle Blocks: An Introductory Manual and Turtle Blocks: A Manual for Advanced Blocks
Turtle Confusion presents 40 shape challenges to the learner that must be completed using basic Logo-blocks. The challenges are based on Barry Newell’s 1988 book, Turtle Confusion: Logo Puzzles and Riddles. You can access these puzzles from the Turtle Confusion page.
Music Blocks is fork of Turtle Blocks with additional blocks for programming music.
Bugs can be reported in the issues section of this repository.
Please consider contributing to the project, with your ideas, your artwork, your lesson plans, and your code.
Programmers, please follow these general guidelines for contributions.
Turtle Blocks has a plugin mechanism that is used to add new blocks. You can learn more about how to use plugins (and how to write them) from the Plugins Guide.
- Mindstorms: blocks to interact with the LEGO Mindstorms robotics kit
- RoDi: blocks to interact with RoDi wireless robot
- Carbon Calculator: blocks for exploring your carbon footprint
- Maths: addition blocks for some more advanced mathematics
- Translate: blocks for translating strings between languages, e.g., English to Spanish
- Dictionary: a block to look up dictionary definitions
- Weather: blocks to retrieve global weather forecasts
- Logic: blocks for bitwise Boolean operations
- Finance: a block for looking up market prices
- Bitcoin: a block for looking up bitcoin exchange rates
- Nutrition: blocks for exploring the nutritional content of food
- Facebook: a block for publishing a project to Facebook
- Heap: blocks to support a heap and for loading and saving data
- Accelerometer: blocks for accessing an accelerometer
- Turtle: blocks to support advanced features when using multiple turtles
- Gmap: blocks to support generation of Google maps.
- Random quote: returns random quote of the day