At EuroPython I saw several PyGame-based presentations. Armin Rigo has been doing this for years and with impressive results (visualizing Greenlets for example). But the best one I saw was Gustavo Niemeyer's Solving Puzzles with Python: http://www.python-in-business.org/ep2005/talk.chtml?talk=1194&track=687
Very cool visalizations of the puzzles and their solutions. On 7/18/05, Dethe Elza <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > At the Vancouver Python Conference last year, Paul Prescod joked that > I was the only one writing my own presentation software. I also used > PyGame, but in my case each "slide" was a mini-game (or game-in- > progress). I'll note that it was the last time I ever used PyGame > and I would have abandoned it sooner if I hadn't committed to doing a > presentation about it. It reminded me of doing programming on the > Mac in the 68K days, when you had to write your own main loop, your > own event management, etc. Very primitive. If I need slide-show > type presentations these days, I tend to go with S5[1] using Safari > or Firefox. > > On the other hand, the next presentation I did for Paul (at the > VanPyZ monthly meeting last February), I wrote the presentation > software using Cocoa (OS X framework), Python, XML, and Renaissance > (framework for turning XML into Cocoa UI). So perhaps I am a glutton > for punishment. -- --Guido van Rossum (home page: http://www.python.org/~guido/) _______________________________________________ Edu-sig mailing list [email protected] http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/edu-sig
