It's summer vacation for Scratch Cat and the eCSI Team. Follow the directions. Click the paper airplane to view and select from his vacation options. Can't make up your mind? You can try one and then choose again. Can you guess which one Jennzer would choose for herself? Looking to learn from this example? Take a closer look at how the following actions were coded: 1. How do you make sprites look like they are getting closer to you? Analyze the code in the Cat sprite for watching Netflix, visiting the museum, and the Disney main street. 2. How did Scratch Cat turn around in the Netflix scene or NYC theater scene? Look at the sprite's costumes. 3. How did I achieve the scrolling background in the Road Trip scene? Look at the Panorama Sprites and their costumes along with the code of Panorama 2. 4. How did I use one picture frame sprite five times in the museum scene? 5. How were graphic effects used in the theater and pool scenes? 6. How were My Blocks used throughout the program to increase efficiency? 7. What other efficiencies are built into this project? Consider sprite costumes, backdrops, broadcasting, and parallel program structures.
- The Netflix Sound effect is from https://quicksounds.com - The eCSI Logo is copyright Baltimore County Public Schools - The Jennzer avatar was created using Bitmoji - All photo thumbnail Sprites are from Unsplash.com. The following backdrops are also from Unsplash.com: Pool, Disney2, Balcony, and the Panorama background sprites. All are free for use under the standard Unsplash license. - Paper airplane, sewing machine, picture frame, lemonade, safari hat, and seagulls are from Wixie clip art. - Additional artwork and modifications of images from the Scratch library were done by me; Jennzer.