Interesting too, because Applescript is a kind of offshoot of HyperTalk. It was 
my impression that Applescript was a way to get the whole operating system and 
applications to work like Hypercard did. It was a great idea, and is still 
incredibly useful, but the severe downside to Applescript is trying to decipher 
what those damned application dictionaries are asking you to do. Most of the 
time there are absolutely NO examples of syntax.

I have read through the Acrobat one, and I have to tell you I still have no 
idea how to do most things. I always have to revert to googling some method, 
and then when I see what they are doing, I can find absolutely no correlation 
in the Acrobat dictionary. I have similar problems with other dictionaries. I 
eventually end up using javascript, and having Applescript tell acrobat to run 
the javascript as javascript. Writing Livecode to tell Applescript to tell 
Acrobat to tell Javascript to do a series of things is an interesting exercise 
in multidimensional thinking, but I find it is still much MUCH easier than the 
trial and error (almost always error) of doing it completely in Applescript.

While Applescript seems on it’s face to be a way of writing programs in a way 
that is accessible to more common developers like myself, it turns out to be a 
highly specialized language that needs to be studied and mastered like many 
other high level languages. “Livetalk” if you will, allows novice programmers 
to get going almost right away.

Bob S


On Feb 22, 2015, at 09:47 , Mark Schonewille 
<m.schonewi...@economy-x-talk.com<mailto:m.schonewi...@economy-x-talk.com>> 
wrote:

Hi Geoff,

While this looks very nifty, it definitely isn't easier to program. LiveCode is 
much easier (IMHO). We should never be able to do this with LiveCode, simply 
because this isn't how xTalk languages function.

One important difference is that AppleScript uses typed variables and even 
typed data and objects, while in an xTalk language everything is a string 
(except for arrays perhaps, which are constructs of strings). I consider this 
an advantage of xTalks.

If you really like this way of programming, you can create Cocoa-AppleScript 
applications with XCode, which I actually consider a very interesting way of 
programming, but I'm happy that I can use LiveCode next to AppleScript.

--
Best regards,

Mark Schonewille

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