You will get few kids excited about programs that run on a character screen nowadays, so any starting program will require quite a bit of boilerplate that sets up an interesting environment.
Swift Playgrounds on iOS has that, and allows you to inspect some (most? All?) of the source of that boilerplate code.
I wish it ran on Mac OS, because it currently is too limited for ‘real’ work.
The ‘lessons’ are nice, though. For example, there is a playground using ARKit now)
Swift Playgrounds on iOS has that, and allows you to inspect some (most? All?) of the source of that boilerplate code.
I wish it ran on Mac OS, because it currently is too limited for ‘real’ work.
The ‘lessons’ are nice, though. For example, there is a playground using ARKit now)