GENIE: Developing and Assessing State-of-the-Art Integrated Programming Environments

This videotape demonstrates the functionality of Carnegie Mellon's GENIE programming environments. GENIE environment are publicly available on the Macintosh for Pascal and Richard Pattis' Karel the Robot teaching language. They are appropriate for use in introductory and intermediate compu...

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Veröffentlicht in:SIGCHI bulletin 1992-04, Vol.24 (2), p.39-40
Hauptverfasser: Goldenson, Dennis R., Chandhok, Ravinder P., Garlan, David H., Meter, Glenn, Miller, Philip L., Pane, John, Carrasquel, Jacobo, Roberts, James A., Skwarecki, Edward J.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This videotape demonstrates the functionality of Carnegie Mellon's GENIE programming environments. GENIE environment are publicly available on the Macintosh for Pascal and Richard Pattis' Karel the Robot teaching language. They are appropriate for use in introductory and intermediate computer programming methods courses at both the collegiate and secondary school levels. The Karel environment has been used successfully in group settings as early as the fourth grade.GENIE environments are built around syntax directed structure editors. [1, 2] Rather than edit only individual ASCII characters, the editors manipulate elements designated by a specific language grammar. Syntax errors are either prevented altogether or corrected immediately in context.Earlier structure editors often traded their syntax error prevention functionality for highly constrained and clumsy user interfaces. GENIE environments gracefully integrate text and structure editing, such that they have the "look and feel" of a good text editor, with the "intelligence" of a syntax directed structure editor.Through access to a common structure editor data base, GENIE environments combine many advanced tools for program design, comprehension and testing, all integrated in a single, uniform Macintosh user interface. Student program structures are maintained in "unparse" trees which can be mapped to and from text and graphics in many novel ways not constrained by a language's concrete syntax.[3] Different views of a common program database can be displayed and modified concurrently, emphasizing structure and design as well as implementation detail. [4] Similarly, arbitrary pieces of program structure can be hidden from view or displayed at will.At run time GENIE program can be traced at the level of expressions. Graphical data visualizations displaying arbitrary combinations of structured types are updated dynamically during run time and displayed in a representation of the program call stack. [5] Other notable GENIE features include an extensive contextual help system and a "notes" feature useful for project management, course assignments and "on-line" grading.User studies have been conducted at several universities and secondary schools throughout the United States. [6, 7, 8, 9] GENIE students in demanding courses have performed strikingly better than have students using other commercially available Macintosh software configurations.
ISSN:0736-6906
DOI:10.1145/142386.1055544