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  1. Online Logo - Transum

    An online version of the Logo programming language with mathematical challenges.

  2. LOGO Basics - Coding for Kids - Fun Way to Learn Programming

    On this page, we will explore the basic LOGO commands that enable us to draw various shapes. LOGO supports turtle move commands, loop commands (REPEAT and REPCOUNT), and several pen …

  3. Logo Resources

    This is the manual for the complete Logo language, with over 600 commands. It helps you get started, and provides detailed information about all the commands, many written for advanced programmers.

  4. Logo - Quick Guide - Online Tutorials Library

    Once we have described our procedure to Logo, we can enter its name on the command line, just as we would do to any of the built-in things. In this case, we would type square on the command line and …

  5. logo_commands.pdf - SlideShare

    The document describes various commands and functions in MSW Logo including commands to move and draw with the turtle, set properties of the pen and turtle, create shapes using repetition of …

  6. MSW Logo Commands Ict

    This document provides descriptions and examples of various commands used in MSW Logo, including commands for moving and turning the turtle, drawing shapes using repetition of commands, setting …

  7. Logo Tutorial - Brown University

    Logo was developed in the late 1960s at Bolt Beranek and Newman, Inc., in Cambridge, MA by W. Feurzeig, D. Bobrow and S. Papert. Its purpose was to teach children to program. Its central feature …

  8. LOGO Commands 1 - MIT

    Use the commands below to start drawing pictures on the computer with your LOGO turtle. The command descriptions were adapted from the Berkeley Logo User Manual, Copyright 1993 by the …

  9. Turtle Academy - Lessons

    With those commands you can use the turtle to draw beautiful shapes. You type in the Logo commands in the box below the drawing box which is also known as the command box.

  10. If something is being spoken (effected by the Say command), waits for the speech to finish before proceeding. This stops consecutive Say commands from overlaying each other.