The archive sounds good Andre! I would like to suggest that the home page of such a wiki ask submitters to put examples under folders for particular categories, either adding to existing ones or creating new ones where needed. Also wikis search for pages based on categories. We might agree on some basic terms to use in categories. One group might be based on level of difficulty or length ....
Then follow the basic Wiki ethos, and let people organize what they submit, adding to existing groupings where it makes sense, and creating new ones as needed. Andy On Sat, Jun 7, 2008 at 3:03 PM, Andre Roberge <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi everyone, > > A new Crunchy screencast is available at > http://showmedo.com/videos/video?name=1430030&fromSeriesID=143 > > In this video, I demonstrate how a customized version of MoinMoin can > be used to easily create interactive tutorials for Crunchy. > > Using this customized version of MoinMoin, it would be easy to set up > a central repository where teachers could create a collection of > online lessons with exercises to learn Python. Students could retrieve > these lessons using Crunchy and get immediate feedback through the use > of doctest-based exercises. > > Note that what is being shown is just an early prototype of a Crunchy > parser for MoinMoin. More is expected to come over the course of the > summer. > > <dreaming> > Apparently, there are 496 subscribers to edu-sig. Imagine the > following scenario: > 1. a central repository is created (perhaps on the Python wiki site) > 2. each of us contribute 5 doctest-based exercises, covering all > aspect of Python, in the next year. Only 5 exercises written in one > year. > > The result would be 2500 exercises that students could use to learn > from. Something like this, I believe, would be an invaluable resource > for teachers - and certainly contribute to Python's popularity > </dreaming> > > Cheers, > > André > _______________________________________________ > Edu-sig mailing list > [email protected] > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/edu-sig > -- Andrew N. Harrington Director of Academic Programs Computer Science Department Loyola University Chicago 512B Lewis Towers (office) Snail mail to Lewis Towers 416 820 North Michigan Avenue Chicago, Illinois 60611 http://www.cs.luc.edu/~anh Phone: 312-915-7982 Fax: 312-915-7998 [EMAIL PROTECTED] for graduate administration [EMAIL PROTECTED] for undergrad administration [EMAIL PROTECTED] as professor
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