Bruce
Thanks for the explanation, Sebastian. It led me to look into
associations and dictionaries, which led me to page 190 in /Pharo By
Example/. The character, ->, is there used in examples. It is described
as a message (I assume a binary message). I found -> also in the index
under Object. Thanks again.
- [Pharo-users] Use of -> in Pharo Co... Bruce Prior
- Re: [Pharo-users] Use of -> in... Sebastian Heidbrink via Pharo-users
- Re: [Pharo-users] Use of -> in... Martin McClure
- Re: [Pharo-users] Use of ->... p...@highoctane.be
- Re: [Pharo-users] Use of ->... David T. Lewis
- Re: [Pharo-users] Use of -> in... stepharo
- Re: [Pharo-users] Use of -> in... Bruce Prior
- Re: [Pharo-users] Use of ->... Sebastian Heidbrink via Pharo-users
- Re: [Pharo-users] Use of ->... Ben Coman
- [Pharo-users] Use of -> in Pha... Bruce Prior