The Power of Computational Thinking: Games, Magic and Puzzles to Help You Become a Computational Thinker - Couverture rigide

Mcowan, Peter William; Curzon, Paul

 
9781786341839: The Power of Computational Thinking: Games, Magic and Puzzles to Help You Become a Computational Thinker

Synopsis

Overall, I believe that this book achieves its goals. It discusses a wide variety of problems from the perspective of computer scientists, and introduces the big ideas that underlie the mathematical way of thinking. I would certainly recommend it to a young person who has mathematical aptitude and needs insight into what computational thinking really means.


MAA Reviews

The Power of Computational Thinking shows that learning to think can be fascinating fun.

  • Can you become a computational thinker?
  • Can machines have brains?
  • Do computers really see and understand the world?
  • Can games help us to study nature, save lives and design the future?
  • Can you use computational thinking in your everyday activities?

Yes, and this book shows you how.

Computational thinking has changed the way we all live, work and play. It has changed the way science is done too; won wars, created whole new industries and saved lives. It is at the heart of computer programming and is a powerful approach to problem solving, with or without computers. It is so important that many countries now require that primary school children learn the skills.

Professors Paul Curzon and Peter McOwan of Queen Mary University of London have written a unique and enjoyable introduction. They describe the elements of computational thinking - such as algorithmic thinking, decomposition, abstraction and pattern matching - in an entertaining and accessible way, using magic tricks, games and puzzles, as well as through real and challenging problems that computer scientists work on.

This book gives you a head start in learning the skills needed for coding, and will improve your real life problem solving skills. It will help you design and evaluate new technologies, as well as understand both your own brain and the digital world in a deeper way.

Les informations fournies dans la section « Synopsis » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.

Présentation de l'éditeur

Overall, I believe that this book achieves its goals. It discusses a wide variety of problems from the perspective of computer scientists, and introduces the big ideas that underlie the mathematical way of thinking. I would certainly recommend it to a young person who has mathematical aptitude and needs insight into what computational thinking really means.


MAA Reviews

The Power of Computational Thinking shows that learning to think can be fascinating fun.

  • Can you become a computational thinker?
  • Can machines have brains?
  • Do computers really see and understand the world?
  • Can games help us to study nature, save lives and design the future?
  • Can you use computational thinking in your everyday activities?

Yes, and this book shows you how.

Computational thinking has changed the way we all live, work and play. It has changed the way science is done too; won wars, created whole new industries and saved lives. It is at the heart of computer programming and is a powerful approach to problem solving, with or without computers. It is so important that many countries now require that primary school children learn the skills.

Professors Paul Curzon and Peter McOwan of Queen Mary University of London have written a unique and enjoyable introduction. They describe the elements of computational thinking - such as algorithmic thinking, decomposition, abstraction and pattern matching - in an entertaining and accessible way, using magic tricks, games and puzzles, as well as through real and challenging problems that computer scientists work on.

This book gives you a head start in learning the skills needed for coding, and will improve your real life problem solving skills. It will help you design and evaluate new technologies, as well as understand both your own brain and the digital world in a deeper way.

Présentation de l'éditeur

The Power of Computational Thinking shows that learning to think can be fascinating fun.

  • Can you become a computational thinker?
  • Can machines have brains?
  • Do computers really see and understand the world?
  • Can games help us to study nature, save lives and design the future?
  • Can you use computational thinking in your everyday activities?

Yes, and this book shows you how.

Computational thinking has changed the way we all live, work and play. It has changed the way science is done too; won wars, created whole new industries and saved lives. It is at the heart of computer programming and is a powerful approach to problem solving, with or without computers. It is so important that many countries now require that primary school children learn the skills.

Professors Paul Curzon and Peter McOwan of Queen Mary University of London have written a unique and enjoyable introduction. They describe the elements of computational thinking - such as algorithmic thinking, decomposition, abstraction and pattern matching - in an entertaining and accessible way, using magic tricks, games and puzzles, as well as through real and challenging problems that computer scientists work on.

This book gives you a head start in learning the skills needed for coding, and will improve your real life problem solving skills. It will help you design and evaluate new technologies, as well as understand both your own brain and the digital world in a deeper way.

Les informations fournies dans la section « A propos du livre » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.

Autres éditions populaires du même titre

9781786341846: Power Of Computational Thinking, The: Games, Magic And Puzzles To Help You Become A Computational Thinker

Edition présentée

ISBN 10 :  1786341840 ISBN 13 :  9781786341846
Editeur : WSPC (EUROPE), 2017
Couverture souple