Hi Alexandre,

This are exiting news! I have been using Roassal and it has been a pleasure. I don't know if I'll have the time for a complete review, but what I'm going to do is to go to the book when I think I need a better understanding of the code I'm trying to write for a particular visualization and made comments. I have already started and I'm using hypothesis[1] to make my first annotations on the book web pages. Look at [2] to see the first one(s). By the way, hypothesis has been chosen in an academic and publishers alliance to promote open comments on the web[3]

[1] https://hypothes.is/
[2] https://via.hypothes.is/https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/31543901/AgileVisualization/Trachel/0103-Trachel.html
[3] https://hypothes.is/blog/a-coalition-of-over-40-scholarly-publishers/

Cheers,

Offray

Ps: I have a "philosophical problem" with the "Hello World" example everywhere, and a particular place where it seems uninteresting is in data visualization where a lot of introductory visualization are far more powerful, yet simple, but I think that would need a proper blog post instead of a margin comment.

On 23/12/15 12:57, Alexandre Bergel wrote:
Dear All,

As you may have heard, AgileVisualization is a book about the Roassal 
visualization engine.
We hope to have the book released soon, within a couple of months. It would be 
fantastic to have feedback:

        http://agilevisualization.com

The book is a fantastic result of the community. You guys made this possible, 
and we wish to thank you very much for this.

Beers will flow at ESUG for everybody who comment on the chapters :-)
We also have live discussion on Slack, channel #Roassal (see 
http://pharo.org/community on how to join Slack)

Cheers,
Alexandre


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