On Sun, Feb 28, 2016, 18:50 Doc O'Leary <[email protected]>
wrote:

>
> The purpose of this discussion is to see if there *is* a shared aim that
> can be cooperatively achieved.


Yes.

If there isn’t, the GNUstep project
> should explicitly state that it will not welcome code or coders that
> work with Apple platforms.
>

I was unaware we are refusing them.

Seek professional medical help.


This kind of language should be unacceptable in a polite society no matter
the context.

You have not made a point, but just demonstrated you are unwilling to
encourage polite discussions.


> > I mean, who would ever do that?
>
> People who have enough sense to *not* code something from scratch when
> perfectly useful software already exists that solves the problem.  That’s
> the reality when it comes to Mac and iOS software: it exists in volumes,
> often with GNU licenses (or one’s even more free), and can serve as not
> only a test for the completeness of GNUstep frameworks, but as a ready
> introduction to large numbers of people who could contribute to the
> project.
>

You are shooting your own argument in the foot.

OS X also exists. People who have sense enough not to "code something from
scratch when
perfectly useful software already exists that solves the problem" will be
happy to use it.

Your inconsistencies and aggressiveness demonstrate your participation in
this mailing list exists solely to facilitate conflict. Your participation
is not helping.

Please reconsider your approach.

Now for an alternate approach to responding to what you propose: exactly.
We want that. In many cases, however, grabbing a single GPL app and "making
it work" is a multimonth effort.

You mention iOS. The Hollywood-style handwaving you've done there is scary.
Making iOS apps run absolutely requires well-greased Core Animation. At
that point you can consider looking at implementing the new main loop
generating events etc. Then you start working on elementary UI elements.
Only some of these are actually parallelizable. We also discussed and keep
in mind the option of using Chameleon, if we have CA in AppKit.

How would you run such a project in a company, when you're paying people
for 8h/day of their attention? How long would it take?

Now cut that down to (in my case) weekends and, at that, only some
weekends. This weekend, I chose to finally visit a friend who lives in a
suburb of Dublin. On Sunday, a friend who lives in different suburb visited
me. I was sufficiently drained that I didn't touch much of any projects.

You are conflating lack of interest and goals with lack of manpower.

I would like to see a mobile game I wrote run on Android. It's one of the
reasons I am interested in having well layered implementation of relevant
frameworks done.

To attract people, I would *like* to write an IDE that can work with
.pbxproj files in a *correct* fashion. This means implementing way more
than a reader for .pbxproj format and a simple build system; the
proprietary counterpart IDE has a pretty neat plugin infrastructure.

My goals are published.
Our goals are published.
What are your goals?

Because they sure seem like "try to de-motivate the few people who are
interested in improving the project, for their own or others' benefit".
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