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Honeybee Integration Project

The purpose of this project is to teach users something new about honeybees. The project features a series of honeybee-themed mini-games and quizzes. The majority of the project is made of functions that are linked to each other to create a cohesive experience.

What is the project?
The project is intended for my COP 1500 class assignment that spanned across the 16-week semseter. The main purpose is to teach me how to use Python.

Who made it?
The project was produced independently by me, Katarya Johnson-Williams, with periodic feedback from Student Assistants and Professor Vanselow.

When did you make it? At what level of experience and proficiency were / are you?
I have been programming for a few years for fun, but this was my first serious programming project. I would consider myself a noivce programmer. I created the project between September 1st, 2020 to November 30th, 2020.

Why did you make it? For fun? For an assignment? How does it reflect you as a person?
This project was created as an assignment for my COP 1500 class. It reflects me as a person because I have been a beekeeper for four years and I am very passionate about honeybees. Additionally, I am a starting the software engineering program at FGCU and I want to learn as much programming as possible.

Where did you make it? What school / class?
I made the project on the FGCU campus. Class was virtual this semseter due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Demonstration

Sample GIF
Made using GIPHY

Run My Program

  1. Install PyCharm or Visual Studio Code
  2. Copy/Paste my project into your application
  3. Configure your interpreter and run the project!

Built With


Contributing

If you want to contribute to this project you can contact me at [email protected]. I am always looking to learn new things!

Author

Katarya Johnson-Williams

Acknowledgments

Professor Vanselow, my dad, and all the TAs in my COP 1500 class.

History

No changes as of 11/30/2020

License

(From Template) Public repositories on GitHub are often used to share open source software. For your repository to truly be open source, you'll need to license it so that others are free to use, change, and distribute the software. https://help.github.com/articles/licensing-a-repository/
You have the option to choose a license when you first create your repository.
If you need to create a license for an existing repository...

  1. Go to your repository.
  2. Click on "Create new file" Button.
  3. Type the file name as License.txt or License.md in the input box next to your repository name, a drop down button appears towards right side.
  4. Choose the type of license of your choice.
  5. Click "Commit new file" button at the bottom (Green button) Credit https://stackoverflow.com/questions/31639059/how-to-add-license-to-an-existing-github-project
    To choose a license, see https://choosealicense.com/

Key Programming Concepts Utilized

(From Template) This section would not necessarily be in a real README.
It is a reference for you and a place to impress potential employers with your knowledge. Identify what concepts you utilize so when you need to use them again you will know that you will find them here. Include a brief description of the concepts in your own words to help you prepare for related interview questions.

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