Everyone appreciates applause. Let's use Scratch's instruments to add some new effects to our story:
Our applause needs some work. Actually, I'll be honest with you. It sounds horrible. You'll get a chance to fix it soon.
We used the term instrument liberally. Even though we could have chosen standard musical instruments such as organs, guitars, and pianos, our story called for an applause.
Selecting an instrument by itself did not produce any sound the way the play drum block did. In order to get sound, we had to first select a musical note, so we chose to play our applause in C for one beat.
The repeat block gave us the sense of roaring applause that would not be possible if we chose to play only one beat of applause.
The applause we added doesn't sound good because it's choppy. You can experiment and try to make the applause smoother.
Or, you can turn to the Internet to find an applause sound effect and play it with the play sound until done block instead of repeating the tempo, notes, and instruments we added in the exercise.
Right now, our scene has four disconnected sets of blocks. There's nothing wrong with that. Our projects do not always unfold in a linear pattern.
It's time to write the joke. You should be able to build the joke sequence without much help from me. Here is the joke: "What are the top three reasons dogs don't use computers?" The responses:
Most of you will be wondering what grep and awk are. Let's just say our dog caters to a Linux-friendly audience. Feel free to change the joke to incorporate your favorite operating system, as you see fit.
Add a one second pause between each line. If you need some help, the screenshot below shows a possible approach:
In the next exercise, we'll refer to this block of code as the joke sequence.