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Tired of Flappy Bird copycats but dreaming of creating your own mobile game? Code.org has launched a tutorial for inspiring coders of the future.
What happens here matters everywhere. by Taylor Soper on February 26, 2014 at 7:47 am December 12, 2014 at 10:49 am The Flappy Bird craze isn’t quite over yet. To celebrate a few milestones, Code.org ...
At the intersection of awesome and banal, there’s this: Code.org, a terrific site that helps kids learn coding from an early age, has a fun 8-step “puzzle” that lets kids program their own custom ...
Code.org is putting the incredible popularity of Flappy Bird to good use. It just released a new initiative to help young people (or whoever, really) learn how to code by building their own customized ...
The lesson takes the form of a puzzle that goes through the actual game mechanics of Flappy Bird step-by-step, from flapping the bird’s wings each time you click your mouse, to deciding what happens ...
There are a lot of games and puzzles now that promise to teach kids how to code, but Tickle stands out. Now on Kickstarter, the iPad app was created in part by Mike Chen, a professor of computer ...
They may be quick and dirty, but that’s why Flappy Bird clones are such an inviting outlet for programmers looking to hone their craft. One such person has managed to resurrect the lost (but never ...
In around 10 minutes, just about anyone can have their own version of Flappy Bird running on Code.org.