An interactive Doja Cat music video can introduce you to programming

The video is titled "Doja Codewoman Music" and it is available on thecdn.vox-cdn.com.

The Doja Cat has a music video.

The photo was taken by Girls Who Code.

Girls Who Code, a nonprofit organization that aims to get more women and girls interested in the field of computer science, has released the first ever codable music video. Doja Cat's new music video for Woman was transformed into an interactive experience by the organization.

You can try out the experience for yourself at Dojacode.com, where you will be greeted by a futuristic image of Doja Cat that becomes pixelated as you drag your mouse over the screen. On the next page, you will see three stars, each of which represents a different programming language, yellow forCSS, blue forjаvascript and pink forPython.

The experience begins when you click on the music video. It plays like Doja Cat's original music video, but only you can make decisions, and with code. The bottom of the screen has a timeline with four stars showing when the video will stop and which programming language will be shown.

:noupscale is a file on thechorusasset.com

The look of Doja Cat's nails can be changed by typing in a color.

The Verge has a Screenshot.

You can fill in the blanks when the video ends. The first break allows you to change the color of Doja Cat's nails usingCSS, and the color you type in alters the color of Doja Cat's nails in real-time. The sky in the video turned dark and the stars became visible after I typed in Tokyo in the video.

The site lets you download or share snapshots of how each area looked after you finished coding it, at the end of the experience. The DojaCode video doesn't involve any intense amounts of programming, but I still found it fun to experiment with typing in different options and seeing my changes instantly take effect.