Karel

Here is an example of how to write “Hello World!” in Karel, a programming language used for teaching introductory programming concepts:

put-blinky-forward()
put-blinky-forward()
put-blinky-beep()

Let me explain what each line does:

  • put-blinky-forward(): This command tells Blinky (the robot) to move forward. Since we repeat it twice, Blinky will move two spaces forward.
  • put-blinky-beep(): This command makes Blinky beep, which is the equivalent of printing “Hello World!” in other programming languages.

Note: Karel is a simple language and doesn’t support text output directly. Instead, it uses actions like moving or beeping to convey information. The above code snippet demonstrates this by having Blinky move forward twice and then beep to “print” “Hello World!”.

Prompt
young woman, beautiful face, standing, great body, gorgeous figure, long legs, pretty eyes, long hair, learns Karel programming language, beautiful background, magnificent scenery, Sir Henry Raeburn style, HD, sharp focus, stunningly beautiful, hyper-detailed, Food photography style, Appetizing, professional, culinary, high-resolution, commercial, highly detailed

Negative prompt
verybadimagenegative, bad_prompt_version2-neg, easynegative, FastNegativeV2, unappetizing, sloppy, unprofessional, noisy, blurry, extra eyes, bad eyes, ugly eyes, imperfect eyes, deformed pupils, deformed iris, cross-eyed, poorly drawn face, bad face, fused face, ugly face, worst face, unrealistic skin texture, out of frame, poorly drawn hands, cloned face, double face, blurry, bad quality

Text model: llama3

Image model: SDXLNijiSeven

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

To respond on your own website, enter the URL of your response which should contain a link to this post's permalink URL. Your response will then appear (possibly after moderation) on this page. Want to update or remove your response? Update or delete your post and re-enter your post's URL again. (Find out more about Webmentions.)