Book Image

Python Projects for Kids

By : Jessica Ingrassellino
Book Image

Python Projects for Kids

By: Jessica Ingrassellino

Overview of this book

Kids are always the most fast-paced and enthusiastic learners, and are naturally willing to build stuff that looks like magic at the end (when it works!). Programming can be one such magic. Being able to write a program that works helps them feel they've really achieved something. Kids today are very tech-savvy and cannot wait to enter the fast-paced digital world. Because Python is one of the most popular languages and has a syntax that is quite simple to understand, even kids are eager to use it as a stepping stone to learning programming languages. This book will cover projects that are simple and fun, and teach kids how to write Python code that works. The book will teach the basics of Python programming, installation, and so on and then will move on to projects. A total of three projects, with each and every step explained carefully, without any assumption of previous experience.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Python Projects for Kids
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Ending the program


The final line of code will be to end the initialization of pygame, which we performed at the start of the code. To end this, we will type pygame.quit() at the outermost level of indentation in our code. This goes outside of the while loop so that it only happens when the while loop stops running:

  pygame.quit()

Once you have typed this, your final game code lines should look like this:

Once you have double-checked your code against the screenshots in the chapter, make sure that you save your tiny.py file. Now you are ready to truly give your game a test!