+1 Alexandre
> Le 7 mars 2015 à 04:59, Tudor Girba <[email protected]> a écrit : > > Hi Sean, > > Thanks for the kind words. > > I am happy these tools raise excitement. The funny thing is that it is hard > to convey the interestingness of GT in static pictures. Most often excitement > comes from looks. Yet, take yours for example: there is absolutely nothing > exciting about a couple of lists. But, when you start to use contextual > details during inspection and extend the tools exactly at the point when the > need occurs, the game changes radically. > > Everyone spends these long hours digging through systems. Yet, most people > don't like this at all (if you do not believe me, when was the last time you > heard someone bragging about the last debugging session?). I think the reason > is that until now, the experience was terrible. Digging through systems has > to become a beautiful experience. We owe this to our future self and to the > next generations. > > The current GT is a step (ok, maybe two :)) forward, but there is lots to do > in this direction. And I think this is one area in which Pharo can thrive and > be radically different. > > Cheers, > Doru > > > >> On Fri, Mar 6, 2015 at 5:34 PM, Sean P. DeNigris <[email protected]> >> wrote: >> Sean P. DeNigris wrote >> > the right shows the lines of OCRed text >> >> And (of course!), the line objects have their own custom view so you can >> dive in and break them down to the words they contain (as determined >> separately by Tesseract). >> >> <http://forum.world.st/file/n4810055/Screenshot_2015-03-06_11.png> >> >> This feels revolutionary. All the countless hours I've wasted digging >> through C/C++ watch lists, Smalltalk inspectors, Ruby stdouts, etc are >> flashing before my eyes... what will I do with all the time I save?! ;) >> >> >> >> ----- >> Cheers, >> Sean >> -- >> View this message in context: >> http://forum.world.st/GT-is-So-Cool-tp4810054p4810055.html >> Sent from the Pharo Smalltalk Developers mailing list archive at Nabble.com. > > > > -- > www.tudorgirba.com > > "Every thing has its own flow"
