Kirby writes - > > > Remember that the gui intensive Leo found no reason to go beyond TK. > > > > I haven't tried Leo on a Mac, but if it doesn't look like Aqua, I'd > probably > not be satisfied with it on a Mac (I might still use it in Windows or > Linux). Ditto for Pygeo.
I'm surprised. Hoping we might get through, in an educational context, that looks are only looks. And that functionality is functionality. And that real developers of real world applications might focus on functionality, and short-change looks. I don't think this is a purest, academic lesson. In my real world development work, that is the tact I take, and the tact I am expected to take. Because $ is $. I think we have touched before on the problem that folks tend to get their idea of what software is, from the world of shrink wrapped stuff. Which, as I think we know, represents only a fraction of real world development work. So better help to my Pygeo (and other educational related efforts) would be to educate about the difference between books and covers. No? Art _______________________________________________ Edu-sig mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/edu-sig
