I have posted a series of video tutorial for Pharo and in some of them I explain the basics of OO with practical examples
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLqbtQ7OkSta0ULYAd7Qdxof851ybh-_m_ if you throw also PBE I think you pretty much covered. OO is not really a difficult concept, an object is just a collection of variables and methods and then it builds complexity from there. But if you already so familiar with Squeak that should come as riding a bike, you cant forget these things. So I am sure you will remember it quickly when you try your your own experiments. By the way welcome to Pharo and keep us posted with your progress . Peronally I love Squeak is hands down the most elegant GUI system I have used, but I use Pharo because its more actively developed and better in the things that interest me. On Fri, Sep 5, 2014 at 8:09 PM, S Krish <krishnamachari.sudha...@gmail.com> wrote: > > Welcome to the Smalltalk world.. > > You would have already seen: > > http://pharo.org/documentation in particular: > http://pharobyexample.org/ > > In Pharo Start with the Pharo Tutorials through ( Left Click on the World, > Help >> Pharo Tutorials ) > > Watch the screencasts.. in the documentation page.. > > Probably relevant will be Web application development with Seaside > framework in Pharo Smalltalk: > http://book.seaside.st/book > > Rest will fall into place once you sink yourself in, and ask questions > relevant to where you are wanting to head to.. > > > > > > On Fri, Sep 5, 2014 at 10:29 PM, Mayuresh Kathe <mayur...@kathe.in> wrote: > >> A hello to Pharo-Users list members. >> >> I am Mayuresh Kathe from Mumbai, India. >> >> I used to work with Squeak a while (14 years) back, but ever since I had >> to move over to non-OOP environments, and never did get to work with >> Smalltalk or alike systems ever since. >> >> To add to that, I haven't been programming for over 7 years due to being >> pushed into the management track. >> I have quit the management world, and along with it a regular job. >> >> Am now a consultant, mostly to Web startups which leaves me with a lot of >> spare time to tinker around with what I would really like to. >> >> After a lot of searching and experimenting, I finally landed in Pharo >> land, and things look good. :) >> >> Given the fact that I haven't written a single fully functional program >> in 7 years, I feel like I've lost the ability to code, sort-a rusty. >> >> Would the list members be kind enough to suggest a book I could work >> through to warm myself up to OOP? >> I stumbled upon "The Object Oriented Thought Process" by Matt Weisfeld, >> looks good, but if there's anything better suited to Pharo, would be nice >> to know. >> >> Thanks, >> >> ~Mayuresh >> >> >> >