Hi Doru,

On 19 Dec 2013, at 07:50, Tudor Girba <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi,
> 
> I took a bit of time to describe how the GTInspector works, what makes it 
> different, and to provide hints for several usage scenarios.
> http://www.humane-assessment.com/blog/the-moldable-gtinspector-deconstructed
> 
> It's a long post, I know :), but please take a look. As you might know, this 
> is the default inspector in the Moose image, but it can also be loaded in a 
> fresh Pharo image.
> 
> I am particularly interested in the following:
> - if you never used it, and tried it now, what don't you like?
> - if you used it, was there anything that you did not know?
> - and of course, what do you like about it?
> 
> Cheers,
> Doru
> 
> -- 
> www.tudorgirba.com
> 
> "Every thing has its own flow"

I read the blog post and installed the code in my working Pharo 3 image. First 
off, I like the debugger, it feels polished, and I like the inspector, it is 
quite interesting. The clear tables for instance variables names and values and 
dictionary keys and values are much better. SequenceableCollection indexes 
would be nice. Paging is cool.

I miss an option to go back to less columns, like from 1 to 2 and back to 1, I 
can’t seem to deselect something in the first one, which would be a way to let 
the second one disappear again. I hope I am making myself clear ;-)

We have specialised inspectors for Integer and Float (and maybe some more) 
standard in Pharo, showing more high level virtual fields, it would be nice if 
you could implement those as well, maybe as alternative views.

Which brings me to my final question: how do I write simple custom inspectors, 
given that I am not familiar with Glamour/Moose - that could maybe be another 
blog post ?

Anyway, thanks for pushing this !

Sven

PS: I wonder whether it would be possible to have both types of 
inspectors/debuggers available at the same time, so that one can switch on the 
fly, compare them, use one or the other depending on the task ?

--
Sven Van Caekenberghe
http://stfx.eu
Smalltalk is the Red Pill


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