I second this question! I'm also curious how (or if) people connect to an already-running gnu smalltalk instance remotely.
Mark. -- Mark Aufflick contact info at http://mark.aufflick.com/about/contact On 7/15/07, Frank Sergeant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Paul D. Fernhout <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Bill-- > > I feel the same sort of frustrations with using Smalltalk to develop > free (or commercial) software. All the Smalltalks have various issues -- > just different ones. It is very frustrating. I have enjoyed reading Paul's and Bill's comments and thought I might jump in and ask how the regular GNU Smalltalk users go about using GNU Smalltalk. Both mentioned their desire for a GUI and for for the debugger. I certainly agree, in general. I feel the need especially for a debugger (and browser and inspector) but I wonder if the GST regulars are already doing the equivalent in some way? Perhaps by using Emacs? I often use Emacs with several programming languages but especially with Common Lisp. I don't even use the fancy Emacs SLIME interface to Lisp, just the default interface that comes with Emacs. (Position the cursor at the end of a form and press C-x C-e to execute the form, sending the results to the Lisp buffer that is open, etc.) Could the regular users of GST describe how they go about developing and debugging in GST? -- Frank _______________________________________________ help-smalltalk mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/help-smalltalk
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