Preface
Part I. Introduction to Alice
1. Getting Started with Alice
2. Program Design and Implementation
3. Programming: Putting Together the Pieces
Part II. Object-oriented and Event-driven Programming Concepts
4. Classes, Objects, Methods, and Parameters
5. Interaction: Events and Event Handling
Part III. Using Questions and Control Statements
6. Functions and If/Else
7. Repetition: Definite and Indefinite Loops
8. Repetition: Recursion
Part IV. Advanced Topics
9. Lists and List Processing
10. Variables and Revisiting Inheritance
11. What’s Next?
Appendix A: Getting Started
Appendix B: Managing the Alice Interface
Index
Wanda Dann is the Director of the Alice Project and
Associate Teaching Professor of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon
University. Her research has encompassed program visualization and
object-oriented and event-driven programming. She has published
papers on the use of program visualization in computer science
education for SIGCSE, the Computer Science Education Journal, and
related publications. She has been co-PI for three NSF-funded
projects. She is an active member of the ITiCSE Visualization
Working Group, studying the effectiveness of visualization in
computer science education. She has taken on a major leadership
role in the international computer science education community,
serving as SIGCSE 2004 Program co-Chair and SIGCSE 2005 Symposium
co-Chair.
Stephen Cooper is an Associate Professor of Computer Science
and the Director for the Center for Visualization at Saint Joseph's
University. He taught previously at Rivier College, serving as
Computer Science program director. He has also worked at IBM as a
systems programmer. Dr. Cooper's research interests lie in the
semantics of programming languages as well as in program
visualization. He is the author or co-author of a dozen articles,
and has been the principal investigator for several National
Science Foundation and private grants.
Randy Pausch is a Professor of Computer Science, Human-Computer Interaction, and Design at Carnegie Mellon, where he is the co-director of CMU’s Entertainment Technology Center (ETC). He was a National Science Foundation Presidential Young Investigator and a Lilly Foundation Teaching Fellow. He has done Sabbaticals at Walt Disney Imagineering (WDI) and Electronic Arts (EA), and has consulted with Disney on user interfaces for interactive theme park attractions and with Google on user interface design. Dr. Pausch is the author or co-author of five books and over 70 articles, is the director of the Alice software project, and has been in zero gravity.
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