Getting Started With Scratch 2.0
Getting Started With Scratch 2.0
version 2.0
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t i n t e G g Started
SCRATCH is a programming language that lets you create
your own interactive stories, animations, games, music, and art.
SCRATCH .
SCRATCH
If you have a
SCRATCH
account,
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t r M a t oving S
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2 Add a Sound
Click
Drag out a PLAY DRUM and snap it onto the MOVE block.
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t r a t 3 S a Dance
Add another MOVE block. Click inside the block and type in a minus sign.
Add another PLAY DRUM block, then choose a drum from the menu. Click to run.
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n i a g and Again A
Drag out a REPEAT block and drop it on top of the stack. You want the mouth of the REPEAT to wrap around the other blocks. To drag a stack, pick it up from the top block.
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S o y a 5 S mething
Click inside the SAY block and type to change the words. Click to try it.
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e n e r Flag 6 G
Drag out a
Whenever you click the green flag, your script will start. To stop, click the stop button.
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g n a h 7 C e Color
Now try something different...
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P y e 8 K ress
Snap on a
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9 Add a Backdrop
You can add a backdrop to the Stage. Click to choose a new backdrop. Choose a backdrop from the library (such as Spotlight-Stage).
Click OK.
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10 Add a Sprite
Each object in Scratch is called a sprite.
To add this sprite, click then click People and select Cassy Dance. You can drag the characters to where you want them.
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o l r p x 11 E e!
Now you can tell the sprite what to do. Try the following, or explore on your own.
ADD SOUND
Click the SOUNDS tab. You can Choose Record Or Import a sound
Then, click the SCRIPTS tab, and drag in a PLAY SOUND block. Choose your sound from the pull-down menu.
CHANGE COSTUMES
Each sprite can have more than one costume. To change the current costume, click the COSTUMES tab. Then click on a different costume for the sprite.
ANIMATE
You can animate a sprite by switching between costumes. Click the SCRIPTS tab. Create a script that switches between costumes.
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12 Tips!
Type a title for your project.
The Tips Window shows example scripts you can use in your project.
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e a v n d Share a S
To save your project online, make sure to sign in.
(If you want to save the file to your computer drive, click the File menu and choose Download to your computer.)
Project Page
Click for others to see and play with your project. Type in notes about your project.
When you share, others can visit and interact with your project.
a new project or
for ideas.
or go to http://scratch.mit.edu/help
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Scratch is a programming language that makes it easy to create your own interactive stories, games, and animations and share your creations with others on the web. Scratch is developed by the Lifelong Kindergarten research group at the MIT Media Lab (http://llk.media.mit.edu). Our group develops new technologies that, in the spirit of the blocks and fingerpaint of kindergarten, expand the range of what people can design, create, and learn. The Scratch project has been supported with funding from the National Science Foundation, Intel Foundation, Microsoft, MacArthur Foundation, LEGO Foundation, Google, Dell, Inversoft, and the MIT Media Lab research consortia.
Supported by NSF Grants 0325828 and 1002713. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed on this site are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.