Or you could end up making everything easy to customize and allow the user
to decide what is best for him or her. After all this a big reason why
tools like vim and emacs are so popular. Fortunately we see a move of Pharo
away of hard coded stuff.

On Tue, Aug 18, 2015 at 12:40 AM Peter Uhnák <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Mon, Aug 17, 2015 at 9:15 PM, Dimitris Chloupis <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>> If you are not ready to get out of your comfort zone , you wont be using
>> Smalltalk. Sure change it to left click, but in the end it wont make much
>> of a difference. Smalltalk is for a specific kind of people that are
>> looking for a fresh approach to coding. For everyone else there is like a
>> ton of languages that recycle old recipes and keep things familiar.
>>
>
> Unless, of course, the red button was chosen out of convenience since Mac
> had only one mouse button. (This is just my guess.)
> But importantly there's difference between "keeping things familiar with
> the universe (other OS/langs/...)"  and "being internally consistent"
> (every menu except for the world menu is opened with right/yellow button).
>
> Now the great thing about Pharo is that everything can change if it makes
> sense. :)
>

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