22 lines
2.1 KiB
Markdown
22 lines
2.1 KiB
Markdown
# Introduction
|
||
|
||
Computer programs process information. Some of the information that is input, stored, and used in a computer program has a value that is **constant**, meaning it does not change throughout the course of the program. An example of a **constant** in math is ‘pi’ because ‘pi’ has one value that never changes. Other pieces of information have values that **vary** or change during the running of a program. Programmers create **variables** to hold the value of information that may change. In a game program, a variable may be created to hold the player’s current score, since that value would change (hopefully!) during the course of the game.
|
||
|
||
Ask the students to think of some pieces of information in their daily life that are **constants** and others that are **variables**.
|
||
|
||
* What pieces of information have values that don’t change during the course of a single day (constants)?
|
||
* What pieces of information have values that do change during the course of a single day (variables)
|
||
Constants and variables can be numbers and/or text.
|
||
|
||
## Examples
|
||
In one school day...
|
||
|
||
* Constants: The day of the week, the year, student’s name, the school’s address
|
||
* Variables: The temperature/weather, the current time, the current class, whether they are standing or sitting...
|
||
|
||
Variables hold a specific type of information. The micro:bit's variables can keep track of numbers, strings, booleans, and sprites. The first time you use a variable, its type is assigned to match whatever it is holding. From that point forward, you can only change the value of that variable to another value of that same type.
|
||
|
||
* A number variable could hold numerical data such as the year, the temperature, or the degree of acceleration.
|
||
* A string variable holds a string of alphanumeric characters such as a person's name, a password, or the day of the week.
|
||
* A boolean variable has only two values: true or false. You might have certain things that happen only when the variable called _gameOver_ is false, for example.
|
||
* A sprite is a special variable that represents a single dot on the screen and holds two separate values for the row an |