. On top of that it would have to deal with the issues with
JS itself that make writing decent tools virtually impossible.
Andrew Glynn
-Original Message-
From: Pharo-users [mailto:pharo-users-boun...@lists.pharo.org] On Behalf Of
pharo-users-requ...@lists.pharo.org
Sent: Thursday, June
Smalltalk does have a killer web environment, it's called Seaside. I haven't
come across any good reason jQuery with Seaside isn't sufficient to do anything
a developer might want to - that customers want Angular isn't based on anything
that can't be done without it.
Unfortunately technology
It occurred to me that with the C++ support in Pharo 6 it might be relatively
easy to use this driver https://github.com/vrogier/ocilib to connect to Oracle.
I will look into it over the weekend.
Andrew Glynn
From: Norbert Hartl [mailto:norb...@hartl.name]
Sent: Friday, June 23, 2017 11:07 AM
Thanks, it had occurred to me to take a look at the other drivers in Garage -
been a bit busy though so might not get to it until tomorrow.
Andrew Glynn
From: Pierce Ng
Sent: Friday, June 23, 2017 8:19 PM
To: Any question about pharo is welcome
Subject: Re
RedHat < 7.0 still uses libc 2.12 as far as I'm aware. Pharo 5 has a
downloadable version that works on that OS. OEL with the UEK has an
updated libc.
Andrew Glynn
openmastery.org
-Original Message-
Date: Thu, 5 Oct 2017 11:43:07 +0200
Subject: Re: [Pharo-users] Deploying on Li
There's a reason it's referred to by numerous developers as R-HELL.
Andrew Glynn
-Original Message-
Date: Thu, 5 Oct 2017 21:46:20 +0800
Subject: Re: [Pharo-users] Deploying on Linux with LibC version < 2.15
To: bruce.on...@pckswarms.ch, Any question about pharo is welc
https://medium.com/@dasein42/building-with-versus-building-on-c51aa3034
c71
This is an article not specifically about Pharo, rather on the state of
the industry
in general and how it got that way, but positing Pharo as a way to
learn
building-on rather than building-with, where in the latter case o
of the state of the software industry that I
have seen.
On Thu, Oct 12, 2017 at 11:50 AM, Andrew Glynn wrote:
https://medium.com/@dasein42/building-with-versus-building-on-c51aa3034c71
This is an article not specifically about Pharo, rather on the state of the
industry
in general and how it got tha
I agree with you that difficulty is half the fun, assuming you're a
developer - developers solve problems, so if there weren't any we'd be
a bit out of luck. For myself I've somehow never, in a 26+ year
career, worked on maintaining code. I've only ever written new code. in
fact I usually wind up
exactly the same
thing never helps my case, because whatever lint they use, it has to be
right, there's no way a non-lint developer might be right.
Andrew Glynn
-Original Message-
Date: Wed, 11 Oct 2017 10:01:20 -0500Subject: Re: [Pharo-users] Behold
Pharo: The Modern SmalltalkTo: pharo-us
Oh good, glad the French version is still there. I was starting to go
through it a couple of weeks ago and plan to continue starting this
weekend. Although my mother tongue is English, at one point I was
fluently bilingual (both Quebecois and actual French), and it's a
chance to get some of it ba
aro-users] Behold Pharo: The Modern Smalltalk
To: Any question about pharo is welcome
Reply-to: Any question about pharo is welcome
From: Nicolai Hess
Am 13.10.2017 5:50 PM schrieb "Andrew Glynn" :
I can't remember ever using API docs in any language, dynamic or not.
They give you the m
The first language I played with, I was nearly 5, was a live
environment, Forth. I used it on an old PDP my mother had bought that
was being surplused at the company she worked at. I used Forth until I
was in my early teens, it was far superior to the BASIC that most other
kids I knew who knew an
There’s other questions that are relevant to me:
Do I give a f*** about cool looking web apps? No, I don’t use web apps if in
any way I can avoid it.
Do I give a f*** about mobile apps? No, the screen’s too small to read
anything longer than a twit, or anyone with anything worthwhile to
feel that way.
Cheers
Andrew
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: jtuc...@objektfabrik.de
Sent: Thursday, October 26, 2017 8:14 AM
To: pharo-users@lists.pharo.org
Subject: Re: [Pharo-users] Smalltalk Argument
Andrew,
Am 26.10.17 um 00:46 schrieb Andrew Glynn:
There’s other questions that are
it necessary.
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: jtuc...@objektfabrik.de
Sent: Thursday, October 26, 2017 8:14 AM
To: pharo-users@lists.pharo.org
Subject: Re: [Pharo-users] Smalltalk Argument
Andrew,
Am 26.10.17 um 00:46 schrieb Andrew Glynn:
There’s other questions that are relevant to me:
I
this without having to convert to another language are very popular.
On Thu, Oct 26, 2017 at 3:14 PM jtuc...@objektfabrik.de
wrote:
Andrew,
Am 26.10.17 um 00:46 schrieb Andrew Glynn:
There’s other questions that are relevant to me:
I am glad you opened your words with this sentence.
From: jtuc...@objektfabrik.de
Sent: Thursday, October 26, 2017 8:14 AM
To: pharo-users@lists.pharo.org
Subject: Re: [Pharo-users] Smalltalk Argument
Andrew,
Am 26.10.17 um 00:46 schrieb Andrew Glynn:
There’s other questions that are relevant to me:
I am glad you opened your words with this sentence
that it makes development bearable (even fun and
enjoyable would I say) vs the other stacks. That matters.
Phil
On Thu, Oct 26, 2017 at 12:46 AM, Andrew Glynn wrote:
There’s other questions that are relevant to me:
Do I give a f*** about cool looking web apps? No, I don’t use web apps
that particular language for that particular
task and that particular deployment mechanism.
Can Pharo be called as a shared library from Java JNA?
- HH
On Fri, Oct 27, 2017 at 15:47, Andrew Glynn wrote:
I’m not claiming I don’t or haven’t been affected, only that I no long allow
myself to be
at 3:14 PM jtuc...@objektfabrik.de
wrote:
Andrew,
Am 26.10.17 um 00:46 schrieb Andrew Glynn:
There’s other questions that are relevant to me:
I am glad you opened your words with this sentence. Other peoples' mileages may
vary a lot.
> Do I give a f*** about cool looking web apps? No
particular
task and that particular deployment mechanism.
Can Pharo be called as a shared library from Java JNA?
- HH
On Fri, Oct 27, 2017 at 15:47, Andrew Glynn wrote:
I’m not claiming I don’t or haven’t been affected, only that I no long allow
myself to be. Does that cause issues? Of course
at 15:47, Andrew Glynn wrote:
I’m not claiming I don’t or haven’t been affected, only that I no long allow
myself to be. Does that cause issues? Of course. But I’d rather deal with
those than do things I don’t enjoy. However I only got to that point after 26
years in the industry, so I don’t
Java JNA?
- HH
On Fri, Oct 27, 2017 at 15:47, Andrew Glynn wrote:
I’m not claiming I don’t or haven’t been affected, only that I no long allow
myself to be. Does that cause issues? Of course. But I’d rather deal with
those than do things I don’t enjoy. However I only got to that point
I refer to it as “Craptive Directory”, the only reliable way I’ve found to use
it is to federate it via WSO2 IS or OpenIDM.
You forgot Sun’s implementation, btw, which is cleaner than either.
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: p...@highoctane.be
Sent: Thursday, October 26, 2017 6:07 PM
To: hen
shared library from Java JNA?
- HH
On Fri, Oct 27, 2017 at 15:47, Andrew Glynn wrote:
I’m not claiming I don’t or haven’t been affected, only that I no long allow
myself to be. Does that cause issues? Of course. But I’d rather deal with
those than do things I don’t enjoy. However I only got
.
Can Pharo be called as a shared library from Java JNA?
- HH
On Fri, Oct 27, 2017 at 15:47, Andrew Glynn wrote:
I’m not claiming I don’t or haven’t been affected, only that I no long allow
myself to be. Does that cause issues? Of course. But I’d rather deal with
those than do things I
code in other languages? Do not assume that code
is not extremely well written in that particular language for that particular
task and that particular deployment mechanism.
Can Pharo be called as a shared library from Java JNA?
- HH
On Fri, Oct 27, 2017 at 15:47, Andrew Glynn wrote:
I’m not
particular deployment mechanism.
Can Pharo be called as a shared library from Java JNA?
- HH
On Fri, Oct 27, 2017 at 15:47, Andrew Glynn wrote:
I’m not claiming I don’t or haven’t been affected, only that I no long allow
myself to be. Does that cause issues? Of course. But I’d rather deal with
anything
else), and in any case nowhere near as useful in anything else, will hopefully
be more use than any article can be, never mind one I wrote, not just to me but
also to other Pharo users and to Pharo itself.
Cheers
Andrew Glynn
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: Stephane Ducasse
Sent
fully
be more use than any article can be, never mind one I wrote, not just to me but
also to other Pharo users and to Pharo itself.
Cheers
Andrew Glynn
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: Stephane Ducasse
Sent: Saturday, October 28, 2017 5:09 AM
To: Any question about pharo is welcome
Su
Part of the reasoning is that by writing JVM bytecode, the differences between
the various JVM languages become largely irrelevant, though in some ways it
becomes slightly less convenient if calling, for example, Scala or Clojure code
from Pharo.
The other is inherent JVM limitations and discre
Grafoscopio
improvise it, but also how it increases the capabilities of Grafoscopio.
Andrew Glynn
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: Offray Vladimir Luna Cárdenas
Sent: Saturday, October 28, 2017 11:02 AM
To: pharo-users@lists.pharo.org
Subject: Re: [Pharo-users] [ANN] Grafoscopio is now also an
Your history is accurate, but there’s a few things I’d like to add, due to
having been employed by IBM at exactly that period working specifically on
VisualAge, not only for Smalltalk, but for Java, C++ and Cobol as well. (my
NDA’s finally having expired also helps 😉). It’s not a correction o
esteban because he is writing an objective-C bridge.
Stef
On Sat, Oct 28, 2017 at 2:30 AM, Andrew Glynn wrote:
One thing I’m working on is a bridge between Pharo and F-Script. F-Script is,
basically, a Smalltalk dialect, as is obvious from the screenshot. However for
MacOS and iOS, it allows you
If it would be a help, I can sign the apps.
Cheers
Andrew
From: Todd Blanchard
Sent: Tuesday, October 31, 2017 10:36 AM
To: Any question about pharo is welcome
Subject: Re: [Pharo-users] Pharo 6.1
Actually, it is in Applications
Sent from the road
> On Oct 31, 2017, at 02:34, Esteban Lorenzan
How many development environments use single document windows? Off the top of
my head, Dolphin and … er, Dolphin. That the person thinks it’s supposed to be
an end user application says it al, really.
I don’t hate SDI’s. they work ok for word processors.
From: Dimitris Chloupis
Sent: Wednesda
There is a basic difference between debugging compiled code using debug
symbols, debugging a live environment that’s represented as if it isn’t, and
debugging a live environment that’s represented as if it is.
In general Java is represented the same way as C/C++, although Eclipse is
somewhat
Perhaps #keepStateWhile or something similar might be better than
#unchangedDuring ?
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: Prof. Andrew P. Black
Sent: Thursday, November 2, 2017 5:00 AM
To: Any question about pharo is welcome
Subject: [Pharo-users] Peeking at a stream
I sometimes find, when worki
It looks a bit busy, though not ridiculously so. Of the sites I can think of,
parts.com has one of the nicest LaF’s.
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: Stephane Ducasse
Sent: Sunday, November 5, 2017 11:46 AM
To: Any question about pharo is welcome; Pharo Development List
Subject: [Pharo-users
I’ve used PDFMiner and pypdf2xml previously and both are easier to use now that
Atlas is available. Both work well, though XPdf (in C++) is faster.
http://www.unixuser.org/~euske/python/pdfminer/
https://github.com/zejn/pypdf2xml
pdf2xml (also Python) is slightly quicker than pypdf2xml but doe
Evince is pretty easy to embed.
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: teso...@gmail.com
Sent: Sunday, November 5, 2017 10:25 AM
To: Any question about pharo is welcome
Subject: Re: [Pharo-users] Embedded PDF viewer?
Hello Ben,
UFFI does not allow you to call static libraries. Static libraries
Another couple that occurred to me were academia.edu and medium.com.
It also occurred to me that I must be fond of a very minimalist look … lol.
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: Stephane Ducasse
Sent: Sunday, November 5, 2017 11:46 AM
To: Any question about pharo is welcome; Pharo Development
Btw, I think we gained pace when JS took over the front end, but lost
visibility. Nothing is slower than coding a client/server app with the front
end in JS. The ‘rise’ of JS is a side effect of the fact that the web was
designed, built and continues to be built by ‘coders’ who don’t know enoug
p; it had a really
good design.
On Sat, Oct 28, 2017 at 10:59 AM, Andrew Glynn wrote:
Your history is accurate, but there’s a few things I’d like to add, due to
having been employed by IBM at exactly that period working specifically on
VisualAge, not only for Smalltalk, but for Java, C++ and Cob
to use
than a super ease elegant language without such big library support. The time
when we were relying on our code and our own libraries has passed long time
ago.
On Mon, Nov 6, 2017 at 10:37 AM Andrew Glynn wrote:
Btw, I think we gained pace when JS took over the front end, but lost
visib
schrieb Andrew Glynn:
> They did just release 5.0 in June, lol.
>
VisualAge Smalltalk 6.01 for OS/2 is still running without any problems ...
Marten
--
Marten Feldtmann
Sat, Oct 28, 2017 at 7:59 PM, Andrew Glynn wrote:
Your history is accurate, but there’s a few things I’d like to add, due to
having been employed by IBM at exactly that period working specifically on
VisualAge, not only for Smalltalk, but for Java, C++ and Cobol as well. (my
NDA’s finally
/11/2017 à 19:59, Andrew Glynn a écrit :
> I /suspect/ that a (mostly repressed) underlying sense that a reliable,
> inexpensive platform, if popular, would have been more detrimental to
> IBM than to its smaller competitors. The same goes for the VisualAge
> family -> Smallta
06/11/2017 à 19:59, Andrew Glynn a écrit :
> I /suspect/ that a (mostly repressed) underlying sense that a reliable,
> inexpensive platform, if popular, would have been more detrimental to
> IBM than to its smaller competitors. The same goes for the VisualAge
> family -> Smallta
@lists.pharo.org
Subject: Re: [Pharo-users] perspective request for those
earningalivingfromSmalltalk
Hi Andrew,
Le 06/11/2017 à 19:59, Andrew Glynn a écrit :
> I /suspect/ that a (mostly repressed) underlying sense that a reliable,
> inexpensive platform, if popular, would have been more detrimen
I don’t have any issues with Linux in full screen mode (Mint 18 KDE and OEL7
UEK KDE) but it sounds like it may be an issue with the Wayland graphics
system, and KDE doesn’t use it AFAIK. If so, it may also be driver specific –
what graphics card are you using?
It is just a guess, but pulling
A possible way to accomplish it would be to use an object graph with an
incremental query engine, such as EMF/CDO with Viatra or something similar.
You could then put different character sets in connected objects and query only
as far as you need to.
Andrew Glynn
Sent from Mail for Windows
for Adobe’s
pricing.
Andrew Glynn
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: Offray Vladimir Luna Cárdenas
Sent: Wednesday, November 8, 2017 7:45 AM
To: pharo-users@lists.pharo.org
Subject: Re: [Pharo-users] Writing "powerpoint" like presentations in Pharo?
On 07/11/17 19:39, Sean P. DeNi
y still use Director if it weren’t for Adobe’s
pricing.
Andrew Glynn
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: Offray Vladimir Luna Cárdenas
Sent: Wednesday, November 8, 2017 7:45 AM
To: pharo-users@lists.pharo.org
Subject: Re: [Pharo-users] Writing "powerpoint" like presentations in Pharo?
other media and make it programmable in Pharo, without
going to the "disastrous" slide metaphor.
Cheers,
Offray
On 08/11/17 20:31, Andrew Glynn wrote:
I agree with you – on the rare occasions I do still do presentations I tend to
use CompendiumNG, which is similar to a mind map but can c
esentations.
Hopefully, we will have something better, with metamedium capabilities,
including embedding other media and make it programmable in Pharo, without
going to the "disastrous" slide metaphor.
Cheers,
Offray
On 08/11/17 20:31, Andrew Glynn wrote:
I agree with you – on the
People mistake my notion of a platform having a stable core so that it can be
built on, with never changing that core one bit. A stable, evolving core is
precisely what allows rapid and flexible new product improvement.
Wasn’t that the whole point of deprecation rather than replacement? It gi
’s and a couple
of T5120’s – 64 threads and 64GB RAM should be plenty 😉. Right now a bit short
of time for just playing though.
Andrew Glynn
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: Prof. Andrew P. Black
Sent: Friday, November 10, 2017 11:57 AM
To: Any question about pharo is welcome
Subject: Re
YAML is what it says, lol.
I still prefer using SGML and outputting whatever markup I need, although I
have to use US army software (that only works on Windows) to do it since Adobe
gouges for FrameMaker.
Probably a long lasting hangover from working for IBM years ago. Sure was a
headache, so
Love this:
“Many people in our industry, our profession have a disturbing tendency to be
vague and practice self-deception. Take the concept of a "bug" as an example.
They don't "fly into" our code; we *put* them in it. *We* put them in. That's
why they should be called errors or defects.”
Or,
/xliff/xliff-core/xliff-core.html
It would also likely be easier and more reliable, since the XML support in
Pharo is already quite good.
Andrew Glynn
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: Torsten Bergmann
Sent: Thursday, November 9, 2017 4:59 PM
To: pharo-users@lists.pharo.org
Subject: Re
for, but it might be a
quick way to get key applications’ text translated and be used by a relatively
simple Pharo / Seaside tool. It’s even possible that a decent modification of
Mojito might allow semi-automated translations using LingoHub.
Andrew Glynn
From: Andrew Glynn
Sent: Friday
I think the issue stems from not using Pharo by choice. Apparently he can’t
continue to use VW for political reasons, and is annoyed at having to port
everything to an open source Smalltalk.
I’d probably be annoyed myself if I had to port something I did 15 or 20 years
ago in VisualAge or IBM
The issue probably stems from not using Pharo by choice. Apparently he can’t
continue to use VW for political reasons, and is annoyed at having to port
everything to an open source Smalltalk.
I’d probably be annoyed myself if I had to port something I did 15 or 20 years
ago in VisualAge or IBM
Xtreams has very good performance, but the API’s are messy. I haven’t compared
the performance of ZnStreams, but it shouldn’t be radically different.
From: Stephane Ducasse
Sent: Monday, November 13, 2017 1:59 PM
To: Any question about pharo is welcome
Subject: Re: [Pharo-users] Stream API
Hi Ev
The dropbox URL for the dbf for GADM is no longer there. I can upload the file
to my Google drive and share it publicly, but there’s two dbf files, one a
single layer and one a 6 layer file.
Which does GADM actually use (yes, I’m being lazy).
Andrew Glynn
It is, according to various citations (CiteSeer) etc., being used to fight
measles. Maybe not as flashy, but at least it’s true.
Andrew Glynn
From: Dimitris Chloupis
Sent: Saturday, November 18, 2017 5:10 AM
To: Any question about pharo is welcome
Subject: Re: [Pharo-users] New Pharo article
,
while not standing still itself.
Some of the less journalistic pieces are also on academia.edu.
https://medium.com/@dasein42
cheers
Andrew Glynn
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: Dimitris Chloupis
Sent: Saturday, November 18, 2017 5:10 AM
To: Any question about pharo is welcome
Subject: Re
Here’s a list of the articles @ https://medium.com/@dasein42/latest, in case
any catch your eye:
Latest
Go to the profile of Andrew Glynn
Andrew Glynn
Nov 14
“Dynamics Trumps Semantics”: Why Java is Easy to Learn, but Difficult to be
Good at.
Read more…
Go to the profile of Andrew Glynn
Thanks, for some reason the version I have is trying to pull it from
http://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/103833630/gadm28_dbf.zip
Andrew Glynn
From: Hernán Morales Durand
Sent: Saturday, November 18, 2017 2:40 PM
To: Any question about pharo is welcome
Subject: Re: [Pharo-users] Which dbf does
platforms, it wouldn’t be surprising if Wayland assumed it was
a game if it starts full screen, and intel graphics aren’t all that great for
gaming (so I’ve heard – I have an Xbox with one game – FIFA, lol).
Andrew Glynn
From: J.F. Rick
Sent: Saturday, November 18, 2017 3:06 PM
To: Any question
specifying Java 7 or even Java
6 in their tech stacks “because Java 8 is too unreliable”.
Until mainstream “software engineers” start acting like engineers, i.e. people
who make things work, rather than popularity contestants or fashion victims,
that won’t change.
Andrew Glynn
From: Richard A
https://youtu.be/_JU48-FVqvQ
Doug is a fellow I worked with early in my career, writing Lingo in Director
for presentations.
Andrew Glynn
From: askoh
Sent: Tuesday, November 21, 2017 10:51 AM
To: pharo-users@lists.pharo.org
Subject: [Pharo-users] Article about PowerPoint and Smalltalk
https
resources, those
would be relatively easy to rewrite in Pharo.
In any case, there are at least a couple of articles / projects that may be of
interest.
Apologies for the length of the post – if it’s not of interest just skip it.
Andrew Glynn
>From the Eclipse Foundation newsletter:
Eclipse Newslet
The only time I've seen that behaviour is with the combination of a slow server
and a proxy such as CloudFlare where the sysadmin has set tcp_wait to some
ridiculously small number. Have you tried setting the connection reuse timeout
to 0, or setting 'beOneShot'?
Zinc doesn't support the addit
If you make some provision to handle attributes with the 'binary' flag set,
which are generally base64 encoded data such as the person's photo, GUID/PUID,
and synch options, it should be ok.
LDAP uses similar encoding rules to ASN.1, and ASN.1 has better documentation.
The only difficult probl
Vladimir, I came across these and thought some of them might be useful for
Grafoscopio. Particularly the simple ones like clearer, multilingual fonts.
Andrew
I don't think the claim is that Pharo or any Smalltalk is 'simple', but
when someone new to coding has to first learn how to pretend they're using
a late 70"s terminal and a crappy text editor, then remember 2 arcane
commands just to get a project built, never mind debug it, the price of
entry
n AIX.
All of
the versions were themselves written in Smalltalk.
--
Andrew Glynn
512-818-3291
Hello,
The problem is that in most cases non text editor based IDE are not user-
friendly/hard to understand/hard to use. We are moving toward AST based tools
software side but it will still be
In the event you need a bit more than the below would buy you (although it
sounds like it would be fine) Seaside has a REST add-on ->
http://book.seaside.st/book/advanced/restful
Andrew
From: Pharo-users on behalf of
Sebastian Heidbrink
Reply-To: Any question about pharo is welcome
Date: Tu
I'm not sure that those developers will ever be happy with Smallltalk. Unless
you can do everything in VI and compile on the command line, they feel there's
something wrong.
On September 21, 2015 08:57:21 PM Stephan Eggermont wrote:
> When experienced (non-smalltalk) developers come to Pharo, t
e the full page. The widget also keeps a lease open with the
Seaside server and when the user leaves the page and the widget stops
requesting the lease, Pharo can recycle the pot.
Andrew Glynn
On 7/22/2016 6:12 AM, pharo-users-requ...@lists.pharo.org wrote:
> An Implementation of JSON Web Token
I run Pharo 5.0 with no problems on a Macbook Pro, but it’s running OS X v.
10.12.1. Any reason your OS is backdated?
Andrew Glynn
From: Pharo-users on behalf of Trussardi
Dario Romano
Reply-To: Any question about pharo is welcome
Date: Monday, December 5, 2016 at 11:34 AM
To: Any
Big data, like the ‘cloud’, is mainly a marketing thing to sell big iron in big
datacenters. So if you’re going back to big iron anyway, might as well use
VisualGen for COBOL.
What? VisualGen is written in IBM Smalltalk? Just don’t tell anyone, they’ll
never guess.
Andrew
On 2017-03-26, 1
I find NPM as obscure as Pharo, honestly, and VA Smalltalk is worse
(wth does abt or sst stand for?). Grunt, Gulp, etc., how do the names
relate to what they do?
Electron is as obscure as Phobos (although a phobia with web pages
turned into desktop apps may be appropriate).
AndrewOn Fri, 2018-04
How many subsystems that do pretty much the same thing exist in Java?
Or Programmable Hyperlinked Pasta?
Try this: do a set of Moose queries on a largish Pharo subsystem, say
GLORP, then do the same on EclipseLink, Toplink or Hibernate, either
with or without the JPA interfaces.
Even with the
tly.
>From the user perspective, at least the changes in Pharo provide more
caveats, given they've taken place in full version changes with alpha
versions preceding beta and stable versions.
AndrewOn Fri, 2018-04-13 at 14:39 +0200, Esteban Lorenzano wrote:
>
>
> > On 13 Apr 2018
What about using VertStix for remote execution?
Andrew On Tue, 2018-04-24 at 15:31 +, Santiago Bragagnolo wrote:
>
>
> On Tue, 24 Apr 2018 at 16:18 Holger Freyther
> wrote:
> >
> >
> > > On 24. Apr 2018, at 20:16, Santiago Bragagnolo
> > o...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > >
> > > Hi Holger!
> >
Generally to avoid this I've used the Synapse micro service bus. It
also allows the creation of an unlimited number of queues, allowing
higher priority tasks to "jump the queue". ' Backpressure' is
precisely what message buses avoid in distributed computing.
One of my never-have-time-for projects
Btw I think you meant "thrashing", not "trashing'.
Trashing is what my team leads do when they read my code. 😉.
AndrewOn Tue, 2018-04-24 at 15:31 +, Santiago Bragagnolo wrote:
>
>
> On Tue, 24 Apr 2018 at 16:18 Holger Freyther
> wrote:
> >
> >
> > > On 24. Apr 2018, at 20:16, Santiago B
Grafoscopio exists due to various limitations of Jupyter, particularly the lack
of real support for objects in its core language - Python. JSON is not
equivalent to STON even in terms of storing JavaScript, it's mainly a data
format.
On 8/7/18, 2:14 PM, "Pharo-users on behalf of Sean P. DeNig
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