Follow Ghoulie the Ghost on my CS First scrapbook! Click the sound icon to mute and unmute. Also, click the louder and softer buttons to change the volume. Click the erase button to erase your writing. You can even press C to change the color as you sign the scrapbook! Click Extras for sound and erasing options. Just don't press B. Just don't. Please. Add-On 1: Inside Joke Add-On 2: Soundtrack Add-On 3: Pop In Add-On 4: Memory Collector //Epic_Scribe(Most Likely to Succeed) //Epic_Explorer(Can I Have Your Autograph) //Epic_Sage(Scrapbook)
My two favorite projects I have made this year during coding club is this one and the create your own company. They are my favorite because I worked hard on them and used my creativity to make the unique and interesting. I loved how my company in the create your own company turned out evil. I also love how Ghoulie is just so done with being here. It was surprising to me how I could save a picture of a screen on Scratch. I didn't know that! I am glad that I can add a picture of the screens from some of my projects. I also really like how the ghost dancing looks! Another thing that surprised me was how much the code changed and evolved the more I worked on it. There are a few things I learned about computer science. One thing I learned is that things don't always affect what you expect it to affect. For example, when I was coding the louder, softer, and mute/unmute button I learned that to change the sound, the sprite causing the sound has to run through the sound changing blocks, not a different one. I also learned that testing might not work, not because of faulty code, but because of something else. When I coded the pencil, I was very confused about why the writing wasn't appearing. It turned out that if I went to the outside of the code, my code did work! My favorite part of Youth Coding League was the creativity involved. I could take my projects in any direction I wanted. I could add anything I wanted. There are no rules or limits, just some requirements if you want all of the points. This freedom of creativity is something not all things have, and I am grateful that Youth Coding League does have it.