scratchmitedu-projects-editor-tutorial-getstarted

Scratchmitedu-projects-editor-tutorial-getstarted Jun 2026

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Scratchmitedu-projects-editor-tutorial-getstarted Jun 2026

This is the large white space on the right. You can right-click (or two-finger click on a Mac) in the Scripts Area and select "Clean Up" to automatically align your blocks into a neat grid.

For anyone learning the fundamentals of coding, Scratch provides a safe, creative, and fun sandbox to experiment and bring their ideas to life.

This public link is valid for 7 days and shares a thread, including any personal information you added. This link or copies made by others cannot be deleted. If you share with third parties, their policies apply. Can’t copy the link right now. Try again later. Naming & Saving Scratch Projects and Managing 'My Stuff'

Sprites are the characters or objects in your project. Here you can: scratchmitedu-projects-editor-tutorial-getstarted

Switch back to the Code tab and construct this loop to animate the character: Drag an Events when green flag clicked block. Attach a gold Control forever block underneath. Inside the loop, insert a purple Looks next costume block.

Welcome to the world of creative coding with Scratch! This tutorial will walk you through the Scratch Project Editor — the place where you’ll create animations, games, stories, and art. Let’s dive in.

For more official help: scratch.mit.edu/help Need inspiration? Search “Getting started” inside the Scratch community. This is the large white space on the right

The Scratch Editor is divided into four main parts:

What are you making? (game, animation, story)

Add new sprites from the Scratch library, paint your own, or upload images. This public link is valid for 7 days

Once you have a creation you're proud of, it's time to save and share.

Math equations, random numbers, and boolean logic.

Your project won't do much good if you can't save or share it with your friends! The top menu bar is home to several critical tools:

This is the large white space on the right. You can right-click (or two-finger click on a Mac) in the Scripts Area and select "Clean Up" to automatically align your blocks into a neat grid.

For anyone learning the fundamentals of coding, Scratch provides a safe, creative, and fun sandbox to experiment and bring their ideas to life.

This public link is valid for 7 days and shares a thread, including any personal information you added. This link or copies made by others cannot be deleted. If you share with third parties, their policies apply. Can’t copy the link right now. Try again later. Naming & Saving Scratch Projects and Managing 'My Stuff'

Sprites are the characters or objects in your project. Here you can:

Switch back to the Code tab and construct this loop to animate the character: Drag an Events when green flag clicked block. Attach a gold Control forever block underneath. Inside the loop, insert a purple Looks next costume block.

Welcome to the world of creative coding with Scratch! This tutorial will walk you through the Scratch Project Editor — the place where you’ll create animations, games, stories, and art. Let’s dive in.

For more official help: scratch.mit.edu/help Need inspiration? Search “Getting started” inside the Scratch community.

The Scratch Editor is divided into four main parts:

What are you making? (game, animation, story)

Add new sprites from the Scratch library, paint your own, or upload images.

Once you have a creation you're proud of, it's time to save and share.

Math equations, random numbers, and boolean logic.

Your project won't do much good if you can't save or share it with your friends! The top menu bar is home to several critical tools: