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Learn Python by executing code online and visualizing data structures

Home Page: pythontutor.com

onlinepythontutor's Introduction

Online Python Tutor

http://pythontutor.com/
https://github.com/pgbovine/OnlinePythonTutor/


Copyright (C) 2010-2013 Philip J. Guo ([email protected])

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
"Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included
in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS
OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT.
IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY
CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT,
TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE
SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

======

Summary:
 
  Online Python Tutor enables teachers and students to write Python
  programs directly in the web browser, execute those programs, and then
  step forwards and backwards through execution to view the run-time
  state of data structures.

  So far, over 100,000 people have used Online Python Tutor to
  understand and debug their programs, often as a supplement to
  textbooks, lecture notes, and online programming tutorials.

---
All documentation is viewable online at:
  https://github.com/pgbovine/OnlinePythonTutor/tree/master/v3/docs

---
Repository contents:

  tl;dr: the v3/ sub-directory contains the latest version of the code.

v1-v2/

  Online Python Tutor version 1 - released on January 19, 2010
  "Release" email to 15 friends:

  Subject: version 0.0000001alpha of my online Python tutor
  Body:
  '''
  hi python fans (and non-fans) ...

  this is what i've been hacking on for the past few days instead of
  doing my research ;)  i'm planning to use it as a platform for
  creating interactive online programming tutorials as part of a
  volunteer project ...

  http://python.pgrind.com/

  it'd be great to get your feedback on what i have so far.  i'd love
  to hear suggestions or complaints.  thanks in advance!

  please don't share this link yet, mostly because my app is still
  buggy and insecure (i definitely don't want random peoples from the
  internet trying to hack it right now!)

  pg
  '''


  Online Python Tutor version 2 - released on October 4, 2011
  "Release" email to 13 friends:

  Subject: Re: version 0.0000001alpha of my online Python tutor
  Body:
  '''
  Dear subset of people who cared about my prior email from almost 2
  years ago ...

  I've recently kicked it up a notch with a "2.0" version and am about
  to do a public release soon.  I'd really appreciate any feedback,
  criticism, and especially bug reports on Internet Explorer ;)

  http://people.csail.mit.edu/pgbovine/opt-prerelease/

  Please don't share the link yet since it will be dead soon when I
  move this app to its permanent home.  I just want to get some early
  feedback to eliminate the obviously embarrassing bugs before launch.

  THANKS!

  pg
  '''


v3/

  Online Python Tutor version 3 - Released on September 18, 2012
  to 153,000+ people on Google+:
    https://plus.google.com/+ResearchatGoogle/posts/cseo9qi7LWq

  "Release" announcement from the Research @ Google G+ account:
  '''
  Online Python Tutor: Web-Based Program Visualization for CS Education

  As part of his CS education work at Google, +Philip Guo has been
  developing an open-source educational tool called Online Python Tutor
  (http://www.pythontutor.com). This tool enables teachers and students
  to write Python programs directly in the web browser and then
  single-step forwards and backwards to visualize what the computer is
  doing as it executes those programs.

  Program visualization for CS education is nothing new -- researchers
  have been developing these sorts of tools for decades. However, most
  of these tools never reach far beyond the confines of the researchers'
  home universities due to the difficulty of installing and configuring
  the visualization software. What makes Online Python Tutor unique and
  effective is that it's the first known tool to adapt time-tested ideas
  from the research literature (e.g., rendering of box-and-pointer
  diagrams) for a web-based environment. Now anyone with a modern
  browser can create, explore, and share their program visualizations by
  simply visiting a web URL.

  This ease of access has been a major contributor to adoption: So far,
  over 100,000 people have used Online Python Tutor to understand and
  debug their programs, often as a supplement to learning from
  textbooks, lecture notes, and online programming tutorials. In
  addition, instructors in over a dozen universities such as MIT, UC
  Berkeley, and the University of Washington have used it for teaching
  introductory computer science courses.

  But this is just the beginning. Philip and his colleagues are now
  building an online authoring environment so that, within the next few
  months, teachers and students will be able to save their code snippets
  and add annotations, discussion threads, lessons, and interactive
  exercises on top of the associated visualizations.

  They are also actively seeking partnerships with educators at all
  grade levels to deploy and improve Online Python Tutor. Please contact
  Philip directly or re-share this post with educators who might be
  interested in working with this tool in any capacity.

  Visit www.pythontutor.com to learn more and to start visualizing your
  Python programs now!
  '''

---
Acknowledgments

John DeNero - for helping with the official Python 3 port and lots of code patches
Chris Horne - https://github.com/lahwran - for security tips
Peter Wentworth and his students - for working on the original Python 3 fork
Brad Miller - for adding pop-up question dialogs to visualizations


For advice and feedback from an instructor's perspective:

John Dalbey
Michael Ernst
David Evans
Paul Gries
Adam Hartz
Tomas Lozano-Perez
Bertram Ludaescher
Brad Miller
Rob Miller
Peter Norvig
Andrew Petersen
David Pritchard
Suzanne Rivoire
David Wilkins

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