Just to put in a good word for Fuseminder (in the dev gallery) + Visual Mind
(www.visual-mind.com).
If you want to get a structure churned out, it sure is mighty fine.
Certainly worth any CF developers time.
OK, giving up the rhyme.
Would be the business if it could do 2nd level circuits, but hey beggars
can't be choosers and you can always add to the Fuseminder code....hmmm,
maybe should give this ago, once I understand it of course :-)
[OT] for those who started life on an Amiga and have band width to burn
(6.9mb QuickTime movie), a tribute can be found at
http://www.goldenshower.gs/muvs/vcsclip.mov
very cool.
m
--
From: Richard Kern <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Fri, 01 Dec 2000 13:35:21 -0700
To: Fusebox <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: RE: FUSEDOC compiler
Resent-From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Resent-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Resent-Date: Sat, 2 Dec 2000 13:34:02 +1300
Jeff,
Mind maps are an outstanding way to describe a problem and your
understanding of it.
I was not aware that software was available to do this, I envison thought
clouds, concept bubbles
and connectors, etc like we did in calc. Is this the same? and where is
this available?
Thanks
Richard Kern
-----Original Message-----
From: Jeff Peters [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, December 01, 2000 9:48 AM
To: Fusebox
Subject: RE: FUSEDOC compiler
Thanks for the plug, Hal.
To be fair to inquiring minds, Fuseminder is a tool that builds the Fusebox
framework (directories, fuseboxes, and fusedocs in the appropriate files)
from
a text outline that contains the fusedocs (which I generate using mind
mapping
software).
As mentioned earlier, I'm working on Harness, which will turn Fusedoc'd
files
into test harnesses. Using Fuseminder and Harness will allow you to turn a
well-constructed mind map of an application into a Fusebox framework with
test
harnesses in a matter of seconds. (Or create test harnesses for an existing
Fusebox application.) Don't get too excited, though--as Hal always
emphasizes,
writing the Fusedocs is the hard part!
- Jeff
On 1 Dec 00, at 4:32, Hal Helms wrote:
> You should really take a look at Fuseminder, an app written by Jeff Peters
> who went to my Developing Applications with ColdFusion and Fusebox class.
> It's pretty danged cool. It won't write the app, but it does give you a
> decent start. It's in the tag gallery.
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