Ok, I’ll bite.   Why is writing a computer program “mere details” and writing 
for human readers important?
Facility with language is an important competence, period.   Lacking it in 
technical realms is a massive deficit.

Marcus

From: Friam <[email protected]> on behalf of Stephen Guerin 
<[email protected]>
Reply-To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, The Friday 
Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[email protected]>
Date: Tuesday, March 10, 2020 at 12:12 PM
To: "Wedtech@Redfish. Com" <[email protected]>, Friam Friam 
<[email protected]>
Subject: [FRIAM] Fwd: [netlogo-users] Release of NetTango


---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Uri Wilensky <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Date: Tue, Mar 10, 2020, 11:21 AM
Subject: [netlogo-users] Release of NetTango
To: netlogo-users 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>

Dear netlogo-users:
This message announces a new NetLogo-related product developed at the CCL - 
NetTango, a domain-blocks interface to NetLogo. More details below.

The Center for Connected Learning and Computer-Based Modeling (CCL Lab) at 
Northwestern University is pleased to announce the first beta release of 
NetTango, NetTango1.0beta1, available to use for free on our site at 
https://netlogoweb.org/ntango-build.

NetTango is a domain-blocks-based interface for the NetLogo agent-based 
modeling environment. The CCL has been developing NetTango for the better part 
of a decade, with the goal of creating very "low threshold" access to NetLogo 
for use by younger learners, or in contexts where there is not sufficient time 
to learn text-based programming. NetTango can be used as a blocks-based 
"code-first" interface to NetLogo, or it can be used as an environment to 
author such blocks-based models.

For authoring, starting with a NetLogo model, you can define your 
domain-specific code blocks that can be dragged and dropped together to make a 
working program. For a detailed breakdown of the process check out the NetTango 
tutorial<https://anttango.netlify.com/> and see the NetTango documentation 
page<https://github.com/NetLogo/Galapagos/wiki/NetTango-Builder> for more 
information.

This NetTango release is a non-final beta and more features and bug fixes will 
be coming. Every effort will be made to keep projects created with this version 
working correctly as new releases come out.

The NetLogo user community continues to experience much growth. Maintaining our 
many products like NetLogo and NetLogo Web, creating new software like 
NetTango, adding features to support our users, and expanding the models 
library requires considerable resources.  Please consider making a donation at 
our site http://ccl.northwestern.edu/netlogo/giving.shtml. All donation sizes 
help.

Planning
NetTango is a work in progress, and many more features are planned. This is a 
short list of possible future additions:

  *   A library for NetTango models.
  *   Support for creating and updating variables with blocks, both global and 
agent-owned.
  *   Enhancements to the expression editor, allowing it to do more interesting 
things such as interacting with variables.
  *   Provide some way to restrict where blocks can be placed in a program, 
either for NetLogo syntactical correctness or for modeling purposes.
  *   Add a way to include sounds for block actions.

Feedback
If you have feedback or find bugs in NetTango, please email them to us with 
"NetTango" in the subject line. We will review all submissions and respond as 
we are able. Please send feedback to: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>.

Credits
NetTango was co-designed and co-authored by Mike Horn, director of 
Northwestern's TIDAL lab, and Uri Wilensky, author of NetLogo and director of 
Northwestern's CCL Lab. The current core development team includes Jeremy 
Baker, Jason Bertsche, Aaron Brandes, and Bryan Head.

Support for NetTango was provided by National Science Foundation grants: 
NSF-DRL-1109834, NSF-DRL--1020101, NSF STEM+C-2670354, NSF STEM+C-1642139, and 
the Spencer Foundation (Award #201600069)..

NetTango is built as an extension of NetLogo Web which was built from NetLogo 
desktop. The CCL gratefully acknowledges two and a half decades of support for 
our NetLogo work. The original support came from the National Science 
Foundation -- grant numbers REC-9814682 and REC-0126227. Further support has 
come from REC-0003285, REC-0115699, DRL-0196044, CCF-ITR-0326542, 
DRL-REC/ROLE-0440113, SBE-0624318, EEC-0648316, IIS-0713619, DRL-RED-9552950, 
DRL-REC-9632612, and DRL-DRK12-1020101, IIS-1441552, CNS-1441016, CNS-1441041, 
CNS-1138461, IIS-1438813, IIS-1147621, DRL-REC-1343873, IIS-1438813, 
IIS-1441552, CNS-1441041, IIS-1546120, DRL-1546122, DRL-ITEST-1614745, 
DRL-1640201, NSF STEMC-1745938. and NSF STEMC-1842374. Additional support came 
from the Spencer Foundation, Texas Instruments, the Brady Fund, the Murphy 
fund, and the Northwestern Institute on Complex Systems.

Enjoy,

—Uri

Uri Wilensky
Lorraine H. Morton Professor of Learning Sciences, Computer Science and Complex 
Systems
Director, Center for Connected Learning and Computer-Based Modeling

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