Le 19/1/16 21:28, Tudor Girba a écrit :
Hi,

I was not arguing with you :).

You asked how to find the answer to help you write something, and I replied how 
to get the information. I am not saying that this is the best way. It’s only 
the way it is.

:)
yes but I want to write

"To get all the possible categories, use the help menu item."

Now you have the query to populate it :)

:)

Doru


On Jan 19, 2016, at 9:24 PM, stepharo <[email protected]> wrote:

Doru I know that I can be a power user.
This is not the point I want to make.
The point I want to make (I know I'm dense) is how normal people under stress 
because
    - they learn
    - or are doing a task
can learn and discover.
When I'm hacking my business I do not want to browse a blog post. I want my job 
to get done and get home.

Stef


Le 19/1/16 14:46, Tudor Girba a écrit :
Hi,

It’s not magic :)

You can directly query this programmatically.
- Find all processors defined in the image:
GTSpotter spotterExtendingMethods
- Find the top level processors defined in the first step
GTSpotter spotterExtendingMethods select: [ :each | each methodClass = 
GTSpotter ]

You can find some more details in the last post:
http://www.humane-assessment.com/blog/spotting-senders-references-with-gtspotter/

Does this make sense?

Cheers,
Doru


On Jan 19, 2016, at 12:36 PM, stepharo <[email protected]> wrote:

Hi

I was stupid enough to write in the book that #method is for methods. but this 
is for #implementors.
So how do I get the list of categories in Spotter?
Magic?

Stef

--
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www.feenk.com

"Not knowing how to do something is not an argument for how it cannot be done."




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www.feenk.com

"Every thing should have the right to be different."








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