On Fri, Jun 10, 2011 at 18:40, Richard Stonehouse <[email protected]
> wrote:

>
> What sort of developer would you see as having need of clang and
> Objective C 2?
>

I'm not really interested in clang per se, but it does bring Objective-C
2.0.

I'm interested in using GNUstep as an educational environment for developing
GUI applications. While by itself GNUstep currently has only limited appeal
(primarily limited to enthusiasts like me, but of course not exclusively),
it could be a very neat educational environment.

I'm viewing GNUstep as a Mac OS X -->alternative<--... at least for my
needs. Not because GNUstep is bad, but because Mac OS X is still ;) better.
Primarily this is due to Gorm being a bit clumsy to use (despite being
technically excellent), and Project Center being very, very clumsy to use.
No matter, in the organization I'm working with, there are tons of PCs since
Macs are too expensive. Having GNUstep that "just works" would be great.

Objective-C 2.0 would allow me to initially skip over setter and getter
methods. Initially, because they are of course essential, but if I'm talking
to kids who are coming from Logo/BASIC/C/C++ background primarily solving
algorithmic tasks on various contests, then complicating their life by
explaining reference counting, setter and getter methods just to get them
introduced to "practical" GUI programming,

Objective-C 2.0 is not essential, but it is quite handy.

Would this be in place of, or in addition to, the gcc compiler and
> libobjc?
>

I don't see how clang would conflict with gcc. In fact, as I said, I'm not
primarily interested in clang per se; gcc 4.6 is equally useful for my
needs.

-- 
Ivan Vučica
[email protected]
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