Hello as Norbert I'm also interested. To provide a little more context I'm 
working on a NewWave as a part of my PhD. The new and interesting side that is 
supported is that the NewWave integrates with TaskIT for tasks executions, with 
now added support for boundary events and task scheduling. I haven't used 
Workflow from NetStyle, but as I can tell from the GitHub only part of the 
engine remains, without any examples or user interfaces, and it didn't support 
mentioned? Is there any chance that the original netstyle workflow is to be 
found and checked out?

Best regards,
Sebastijan

________________________________
From: Pharo-users <pharo-users-boun...@lists.pharo.org> on behalf of Norbert 
Hartl <norb...@hartl.name>
Sent: Friday, April 19, 2019 7:14 PM
To: Any question about pharo is welcome
Subject: Re: [Pharo-users] NewWave - WorkflowEngine

I think you should flood the mailing list. I‘m interested, too

Am 19.04.2019 um 18:40 schrieb Smalltalk 
<smallt...@adinet.com.uy<mailto:smallt...@adinet.com.uy>>:


Serge,

Yes, we can work together.

Send me a private mail so we do not flood the Pharo list.

Tell me what you have in mind...

regards,

bruno

El 19/04/2019 a las 9:55, Serge Stinckwich escribió:


On Wed, Apr 17, 2019 at 4:32 PM BrunoBB 
<smallt...@adinet.com.uy<mailto:smallt...@adinet.com.uy>> wrote:
Hi Sebastijan,

Excellent work !!!

I have something similar (a BPM engine) but developed with GemStone
Smalltalk:
Code:
https://github.com/brunobuzzi/BpmFlow
Documentation:
https://bpmflow.gitbook.io/project/introduction

It can be ported to Pharo, from the top of my head i see a couple of issues
with the port:
- GemStone/S special indexes collection must be changed for regular Pharo
collections.
- GsQuery should be implemented in Pharo (maybe already is i do not know) or
remove GsQuery references and so regular collection queries (select:,
collect: anySatisfy and so on)

The project is totally open source.



There is also the BPMN engine that we build with Alvaro Peralta:
https://github.com/A4BP
Maybe we can work together ?

Regards,
--
Serge Stinckwic
h

Int. Research Unit
 on Modelling/Simulation of Complex Systems (UMMISCO)
Sorbonne University
 (SU)
French National Research Institute for Sustainable Development (IRD)
U
niversity of Yaoundé I, Cameroun
"Programs must be written for people to read, and only incidentally for 
machines to execute."
https://twitter.com/SergeStinckwich

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