> On 6 Jan 2020, at 06:11, Joachim Tuchel wrote:
>
> I personally celebrate Smalltalk every (working) day. I enjoy the fun and
> productivity each time I find a way to solve a problem at hand.
Well said.
hi Roelof, i didn't mean to hijack your thread, sorry -- my question was
directed at you, then kinda took on a life of its own.
That said, Sven had/has responded to your op (original post), no?
One additional change I would make: rename "findAnagramsCandidates" -->
"findAnagrams" : it's shorter,
--- Begin Message ---
Op 6-1-2020 om 09:34 schreef xap:
hi Roelof, i didn't mean to hijack your thread, sorry -- my question was
directed at you, then kinda took on a life of its own.
That said, Sven had/has responded to your op (original post), no?
One additional change I would make: rename "f
Ciao Giorgio,
come stai? Mi fa piacere risentirti dopo tanto tempo.
Forse (visto il successo della tua mail), sarebbe opportuno cominciare
collaborazioni in Italia!
Sentiamoci.
Lorenzo
Da: Pharo-users [mailto:pharo-users-boun...@lists.pharo.org] Per conto di
giorgio ferraris
Invi
Here's the permalink to Sven's response (in case it still isn't visible to
you):
http://forum.world.st/is-this-better-regarding-naming-thigs-tp5109389p5109392.html
--
Sent from: http://forum.world.st/Pharo-Smalltalk-Users-f1310670.html
--- Begin Message ---
Thanks.
I have missed that one.
Thanks for pointing it to me.
Roelof
Op 6-1-2020 om 13:13 schreef xap:
Here's the permalink to Sven's response (in case it still isn't visible to
you):
http://forum.world.st/is-this-better-regarding-naming-thigs-tp5109389p5109392.html
-
https://levelup.gitconnected.com/smalltalk-its-not-your-grandfather-s-programming-language-f1985eaa17ff
Great work Rich
My best compliments.
Lorenzo
Da: Pharo-users [mailto:pharo-users-boun...@lists.pharo.org] Per conto di
Richard Kenneth Eng
Inviato: lunedì 6 gennaio 2020 19:07
A: pharo-users@lists.pharo.org
Oggetto: [Pharo-users] Smalltalk: It’s Not Your Grandfather’s Programming
Hi Roelof,
There is a seaside specific mailing list you could join here:
http://lists.squeakfoundation.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/seaside
I have Seaside loaded in an image and can't find the ListComponent class.
IS that the correct name for the class you're using?
If you post your questio
Also this tutorial gives a good overview of Seaside programming and is
different enough from the book that you get two approaches to many of the
same problems:
http://seaside.gemtalksystems.com/tutorial.html
Paul DeBruicker wrote
> Hi Roelof,
>
> There is a seaside specific mailing list you c
Richard! Smalltalk is /the electric car of development systems/!
You need to lead with an image of a *Tesla Model S*, not a Maserati!
What do most people associate with Italian sports cars? Expensive,
impractical, temperamental, always in need of (expensive) maintenance, etc.
Smalltalk is no
Thanks!
I have a question for everyone. Someone has taken me to task for being
"sexist". He says I should refer to "grandparent" instead of "grandfather".
I'd like to ask for your opinion. Would "grandparent" sound better in my
article? Imagine replacing all instances of "grandfather" with
"grand
The problem is that the underlying premise of my article would be undermined.
Our grandparents had nothing like the Tesla.
I used Maserati because it's an /aspirational/ car. Not practical. Not
cheap. But droolworthy.
Nobody dreams of owning a Tesla. But Maserati? Bugatti? Porsche? Aston
Martin?
Hmm, just where are these prof stef Gedankenexperiments :-? I didn't see 'em
in the syntax tutorial proper.
Thx for the tiny-is-beautiful article. I didn't have any moment of satori,
but am happy to have found a prolific author (in addition to
Richard-evangelist)
About not feeling extra-illuminat
I would probably use "grandparents'" as in "not your grandparents'
programming language".
--
Sent from: http://forum.world.st/Pharo-Smalltalk-Users-f1310670.html
On Mon, Jan 6, 2020 at 12:18 PM horrido wrote:
> Thanks!
>
> I have a question for everyone. Someone has taken me to task for being
> "sexist". He says I should refer to "grandparent" instead of "grandfather".
>
> I'd like to ask for your opinion. Would "grandparent" sound better in my
> article?
On Mon, Jan 6, 2020 at 12:26 PM xap wrote:
> Hmm, just where are these prof stef Gedankenexperiments :-? I didn't see
> 'em
> in the syntax tutorial proper.
>
> Thx for the tiny-is-beautiful article. I didn't have any moment of satori,
> but am happy to have found a prolific author (in addition t
I don't think so... In the early 1900's some of the finest and most
sought-after automobiles were battery-powered electrics:
https://www.curbed.com/2017/9/22/16346892/electric-car-history-fritchle
You want to associate with the prestige of being a manly, winning, race car?
Okay:
Sept 7, 1896: Th
I've made the change from grandfather to grandparent. Unfortunately, I cannot
alter the URL — it still reads grandfather.
As much as I would like to use Tesla, the problem is that our grandparents
never drove electric. Without rewriting a substantial portion of the
article, I cannot make a connect
Understood... It is, of course, your essay, and my comments are just my own
view.
And I think I've made my point, which is what I wanted to get across.
I like your writing style, Richard. You're making a huge contribution to
Smalltalk/Pharo and it's much appreciated. Please continue!
-t
-
We could agree to a win-win solution, "a' la Franklin Covey"
designing an automotive market solution, written in Smalltalk, for
Maserati (Modena), Tesla (Palo Alto) and why not Ferrari (Maranello).
All automotive brand will migrate their lines to full electric or
hybrid models.
What do Smalltalk
And it's a very good view, indeed. I thank you for bringing it to my
attention.
I was particularly impressed by the "revival" aspect of e-cars because, as
you said, Smalltalk is due for a revival, as well. This may actually lead to
a sequel article!
I am always amazed that I can still come up wit
I came across a Sanskrit term, "darshan", meaning sight/seeing, used in Hindu
theology, that seeing a deity, *and being seen in return*, completes a human
sense of self/being. I'm ad libbing here. So thx, Richard, for the nod (and
do desist continuing to feed the animals) :-!
"We don't slavishly o
Thanks. This is the "human factors" engineering aspect, the "sales strategy"
part of the technology -- which has its own set of interesting challenges...
And is also very important to achieving success "in the marketplace" -- a
marketplace of the mind, which is adoption and use (as opposed to act
Smalltalk is that times 10,000... (I wrote an entire SMB accounting system,
including tracking "perpetual inventory" in Excel/VBA. I was between tech
jobs at the time..) So, yeah, it will be an excellent vehicle to recast
your "toy app".
Yes, Alan Kay did get his Bachelor's in molecular biology
-- http://books.pharo.org/: "Pharo By Example" (PBE), "Deep into Pharo",
"Enterprise Pharo".
-- PBE5/Section 10.5 for the particular G/E I referred to. You'll also find
it in the Pharo MOOC in Week 2, Lession 11, "The Essence of Dispatch"
got it, thx!
--
Sent from: http://forum.world.st/Pharo-
I should have recommended the MOOC as well... I did ProfStef, then PBE5 (in
Pharo 6.1), then the MOOC. (I did the MOOC in 6.1 also, downloading and
installing the components that come "pre-assembled" in the MOOC image
template you can clone in Pharo-Launcher.)
Oh, and for your comment about Sven
yeesh, this just may take more than the few hours i'd initially penciled in
the sven-article i read earlier was on medium, i think. as is this
calculator one. both read like medium articles ... and suggest an
overarching editorial tone, no? unless all medium authors belong to the
strunk-and-white-
Well, no. This is not a particularly "nice vehicle for programmers to
familiarise themselves with recursion".
To start with, a quick web search turns up
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wheat_and_chessboard_problem.
Problems where the result depend on previous results often fall into
the "dynamic prog
Torsten Bergmann wrote
> Hi,
>
>
> You can load using
>
>Metacello new
> baseline: 'XMLParserHTML';
> repository: 'github://pharo-contributions/XML-XMLParserHTML/src';
> load.
>
>
> Bye
> T.
Hi,
I'm trying to use the sample code in the pharo screen scraping booklet —
h
What is the receiver? There are two and only two relevant objects:
the word and the collection.
aCollection selectAnagramsOf: aString
aString anagramsIn: aCollection
would be good names. In a language that did not let you extend system classes,
anagrams(of: aString, in: aCollection)
would be good
I've always considered "all objects respond to #value" as a bug.
It certainly is not portable: it wasn't in Smalltalk-80, or Apple Smalltalk,
or ANSI Smalltalk, and it isn't in GNU Smalltalk or Dolphin Smalltalk or
VisualWorks. It's a peculiarity of Squeak/Pharo and Smalltalk/X.
This is a misfeatu
When I wrote "is not good English", I meant that "findAnagramsCandidates"
sounds *horrible* to this native speaker of English. "findCandidateAnagrams"
works.
On Tue, 7 Jan 2020 at 18:12, Richard O'Keefe wrote:
>
> What is the receiver? There are two and only two relevant objects:
> the word and
richard, fwiw Roeloff mentioned earlier that the message-name was provided by
the exercise set he's following, and isn't of his invention:
http://forum.world.st/is-this-better-regarding-naming-thigs-tp5109389p5109471.html
. he sh/could fwd your note/s to the course-author ;)
--
Sent from: http:/
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