Activities/TurtleFlags


Turtle-Flags.png

What is Turtle Flags

Turtle Flags presents more than 200 challenges to the learner that must be completed using basic Logo-blocks. The challenges are based on national flags.

Turtle Flags is a fork of Activities/Turtle Confusion that presents 40 shape challenges to be programmed by moving the Logo turtle.

   

On the left, the Argentine flag; on the right, a Turtle Art reproduction

Additional features:

  • You can import challenges from the Sugar Journal (save them as an image file)
  • You can save your results as: (1) a Turtle Art program; (2) a UCB Logo project; or (3) a PNG image
  • You can overlay Cartesian and polar coordinate grids
  • Additional blocks can be added through the Turtle Blocks plugin mechanism

Where to get Turtle Flags

http://activities.sugarlabs.org/en-US/sugar/addon/4682

How to play Amazonas Tortuga

 

  1. Select a flag from the Combo Box (Shown above: 'Argentina').
  2. Use blocks from the various palettes to instruct the Logo turtle to replicate the pattern.

Please refer to the Activities/Turtle Art pages for basic instructions on how to use the block interface and the details of various toolbars.

The flag challenges are loaded from the Combo Box on the Project (Palette) toolbar. When you select a shape, it will be loaded onto the canvas. When you use the Erase button, the current shape is reloaded.

The available blocks are small subset of the Turtle Block blocks: the basic turtle blocks; a reduced palette of pen and color blocks; some basic arithmetic operators; the repeat block; and the action and box blocks.

The Export palette includes save as Logo; save as image; and save as Turtle Art.

What are the challenges?

The challenges are problems of symmetry and geometry which typically can be solved by using a combination of rotations and repeat blocks.

 

An example of a Turtle Art flag (Argentina)

Reporting problems

Please file bugs at [1].

To list all open tickets of Turtle Flags, see [2].

Credits

  • Walter Bender wrote and maintains the code.
  • Brian Silverman is the first author of Turtle Art.