From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
RAPTOR
Paradigm structured, imperative
Designed byMartin Carlisle
Stable release
4.0.6 / April 22, 2015
Typing discipline Weak
OS Microsoft Windows
License GNU General Public License ( free software)
Filename extensions.rap
Website raptor.martincarlisle.com
Influenced by
Flowcharts

RAPTOR, the Rapid Algorithmic Prototyping Tool for Ordered Reasoning, [1] is a graphical authoring tool created by Martin C. Carlisle, Terry Wilson, Jeff Humphries and Jason Moore. The software is hosted and maintained by former US Air Force Academy and current Texas A&M University professor Martin Carlisle. [2] [3]

RAPTOR allows users to write and execute programs using flowcharts. The simple language and graphical components of RAPTOR are designed to teach the major ideas of computer programming to students. It is typically used in academics to teach introductory programming concepts as well. [4]

See also

Other educational programming languages include:

References

  1. ^ Carlisle, Martin C.; Wilson, Terry A.; Humphries, Jeffrey W.; Hadfield, Steven M. (April 2004). "RAPTOR: introducing programming to non-majors with flowcharts". Journal of Computing Sciences in Colleges. 19 (4): 52–60. Retrieved 2016-09-29.
  2. ^ "About". Raptor. Retrieved 2014-09-20.
  3. ^ "About". Raptor. Retrieved 2016-09-29.
  4. ^ Carlisle, Martin C.; Wilson, Terry A.; Humphries, Jeffrey W.; Hadfield, Steven M. (April 2004). "RAPTOR: introducing programming to non-majors with flowcharts". Journal of Computing Sciences in Colleges. 19 (4): 52–60. Retrieved 2015-08-24.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
RAPTOR
Paradigm structured, imperative
Designed byMartin Carlisle
Stable release
4.0.6 / April 22, 2015
Typing discipline Weak
OS Microsoft Windows
License GNU General Public License ( free software)
Filename extensions.rap
Website raptor.martincarlisle.com
Influenced by
Flowcharts

RAPTOR, the Rapid Algorithmic Prototyping Tool for Ordered Reasoning, [1] is a graphical authoring tool created by Martin C. Carlisle, Terry Wilson, Jeff Humphries and Jason Moore. The software is hosted and maintained by former US Air Force Academy and current Texas A&M University professor Martin Carlisle. [2] [3]

RAPTOR allows users to write and execute programs using flowcharts. The simple language and graphical components of RAPTOR are designed to teach the major ideas of computer programming to students. It is typically used in academics to teach introductory programming concepts as well. [4]

See also

Other educational programming languages include:

References

  1. ^ Carlisle, Martin C.; Wilson, Terry A.; Humphries, Jeffrey W.; Hadfield, Steven M. (April 2004). "RAPTOR: introducing programming to non-majors with flowcharts". Journal of Computing Sciences in Colleges. 19 (4): 52–60. Retrieved 2016-09-29.
  2. ^ "About". Raptor. Retrieved 2014-09-20.
  3. ^ "About". Raptor. Retrieved 2016-09-29.
  4. ^ Carlisle, Martin C.; Wilson, Terry A.; Humphries, Jeffrey W.; Hadfield, Steven M. (April 2004). "RAPTOR: introducing programming to non-majors with flowcharts". Journal of Computing Sciences in Colleges. 19 (4): 52–60. Retrieved 2015-08-24.

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