Welcome to BHS Computer Science. If you are a student in the class, the first thing you need to do (and which we should have done in class) is set up your GitHub account.
Once you have a GitHub account, click “Log in to GitHub” below to proceed. Or you can click “Use anonymously” to play with the environment but you will not be able to save your work or submit assignments. (You can always log in later by clicking the at the top of the page.)
If you don’t have a GitHub account yet, please create one and then log in here for further instructions.
Congratulations! You have successfully connected this app to GitHub. However you are not yet a member of the GitHub organization for this class, something Mr. Seibel needs to set up for you.
This is your GitHub profile URL:
Click the clipboard icon to copy it and then submit it at this form so he can add you.
Congratulations! You have successfully connected this app to GitHub. And it looks like you have an invitation to join the GitHub organization for this class. You need to accept that invitation before you can proceed. The invite should be sent to whatever email you used when you created your GitHub account.
I see you are logged into GitHub and a member of the berkeley-high-cs GitHub organization. However there seems to have been some problem finishing the setup for your account. Please let Mr. Seibel know.
This is a tool for the BHS Computer Science class at Berkeley High School. It is intended to provide a simple environment for experimenting with Javascript without all the complexities of a full development environment such as ReplIt or Glitch which we may use later in the year.
It is also designed to take advantage of the browser’s ability to run Javascript natively. It does not need access to a server to run code making in extremely responsive even if the Wifi is flaking out.
Finally, under the covers it is saving work to a GitHub repository in a very simplified workflow that does not depend on immediately learning any git commands. Code written in this environment for each assignment is saved to a directory and branch specific to that assignment each time it is saved. Thus when the assignment is done, it is easy to go to GitHub and create a PR containing just the work on that assignment which can then be commented on and worked on further before it is turned in and merged to main.
You're all set! You don't need to worry about this yet but we have successfully created a GitHub repository for your work:
You can get to it any time by clicking on your GitHub username at the top-right of the screen.
This assessment consists of
functions you need to write
involving translating between code written in the higher-order style
(using the filter
, map
, etc. methods on
arrays) and the non-higher-order style (using for
loops,
if
statements, and variables). The first half ask you to
translate from higher-order style and the second half to
higher-order style. Feel free to start with whichever questions you
are most comfortable with.
This is an open book assessment. You may refer to your code from previous assignments and may look at whatever documentation is helpful. In particular you may want to refer to the answers to the HOF implementation and Array HOFs assignments. However, you may not use ChatGPT or any other AI to write your code.
You can move through the questions with the arrows at the upper right next to the 1 of indicator so if you're not sure how to write one function move on to another one and come back if you have time at the end. I want to see how much you do know. Note: click on the code in the questions to select it so you can copy it into the editor as a starting point.
When you are done, please click on your Github username above
and submit a GitHub pull request of the branch
and request me as a reviewer.