Hi Offray,

For a biologist without interest in bioinformatics at all, it would be hard
to "sell" him any Bio* library. They could be better with workflow systems
like Galaxy, MyExperiment, or the Integrated Genome Viewer, etc. biology is
an extremely diversified field, but actually Smalltalk is the perfect
environment for biologists!

To me, a demonstration of the power of BioSmalltalk is the realease of
PhyloclassTalk which I *know* couldn't be possible with Python, Java, Perl,
for a single developer in a short period of time. No matter how many books
and marketing they try to sell, the capability of exploring and debugging
objects in a live environment is unbeatable.

But BioSmalltalk needs desperately other developers. I am open to explain
the internals and boring details to anyone. In the past I tried to talk
with pythonists but that was like talking to a wall, the feeling I
perceived was the environment was so different that they seemed to be
scared. Scared of everything they learnt was not worth it. But the power is
there for everyone, you can inspect a DNA sequence, query for its
properties in a new Inspector, send it to a server and return its
alignment, re-format and serialize, all like using an exploratory data
analysis with observational transformations.

I also tried to BioSmalltalk gets accepted to the Open Bionformatics
Foundation (actually I only requested a page in their wiki for project
visibility & promotion), but **precisely** at the time of my request, they
occurred to implement a new whole policy of project acceptance (but of
course BioRuby, BioJava, BioPerl and BioPython were all in so they were
excluded) and I would have to pay international conference calls to talk
with them(?) about.... I don't know.

So, the status is the same, but with more objects :). I have added classes
for parsing the Taxonomy Of Life, taxdb, EBI and file formats. I hope to
have the chance to work with the cools project people is releasing in this
community.
Cheers,

Hernán

2015-03-18 23:06 GMT-03:00 Offray Vladimir Luna Cárdenas <off...@riseup.net>
:

>
>
>
> -------- Mensaje reenviado --------
> Asunto: Re: [Pharo-users] [ANN] BioSmalltalk
> Fecha: Wed, 18 Mar 2015 20:53:05 -0500
> De: Offray Vladimir Luna Cárdenas <off...@riseup.net>
> Para: pharo-us...@lists.gforge.inria.fr
>
> Hi,
>
> I just found this old mail. I know that BioSmalltalk is well and
> advancing and I have a friend who works on biocomputing. I Saw the
> Google Code page of the project, but as a not-programmer I found
> difficult to understand what is the "selling point" of Biosmalltalk for
> a biologist...
>
> Anyway I'm just curious about which new experience brings Smalltalk to
> old fields. In my own case, making my notebook for data narratives and
> visualization has been very enriching and even if there are external
> tools in other ecosystems to work on it (pandas, Jupyter, LaTeX), the
> integration with them inside a moldable and modifiable tool is hard to
> beat.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Offray
>
> El 15/03/12 a las 07:32, Hernán Morales Durand escribió:
>
>> Dear all,
>>
>> It's been two years since I've started to work in bioinformatics with
>> Smalltalk. It has been a difficult decision because the quality and
>> amount of bioinformatics libraries is absolutely amazing, but I've
>> received a lot of support from the main researchers at the Institute
>> of Genetics where I'm working in Argentina.
>>
>> Now the initial step for a BioSmalltalk release is done. I hope the
>> FOSS community receive this pre-release as the basis for future
>> enhacements for bioinformatics with any Smalltalk flavor. Although in
>> the short-term it is unlikely for a BioSmalltalk to reach the users,
>> maturity and competitive level of major Bio* toolkits (BioPerl,
>> BioPython, BioRuby or BioJava), it could take too many years more if I
>> continue this work alone. However, BioSmalltalk was not conceived to
>> replace or defeat any other similar packages, but to provide to the
>> bioinformatics community the features of a pure object system. So feel
>> free to spread the word for all bioinformaticians, newcomers,
>> developers, or life scientists, for helping in any way and discovering
>> why Smalltalk is such a special environment.
>>
>> This release was implemented in Pharo 1.3 custom Core, but cross
>> Smalltalk portability was a priority. I'm working now to release
>> versions for GemStone, Squeak and VisualWorks is there is enough
>> interest. Everybody is welcome to contribute.
>>
>> You may download a pre-compiled release from the project page:
>> http://code.google.com/p/biosmalltalk/
>>
>> Best regards,
>>
>> Hernán
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
>

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