Ok, maybe this is going to be a sticky post? :)
I have no problems installing with the following script in a Pharo-Core #10458 :
| instClass |
instClass := Smalltalk at: #Installer ifAbsent: [ ScriptLoader new
installingInstaller ].
instClass ss
project: 'STicky';
install: 'STicky'
The extra packages (translators or evaluators) are loaded by request
selecting the menu item (I don't want to load all the translators in
one-pass because people may want to just use one and that would load
many unnecessary packages for them), maybe you have to wait a little
bit until the installer finish a particular package loading? Have you
received any exception or walkback selecting a specific translator?
Hernán
PS : The only problem I have is in a clean image if opening the
interactive workspace before anything else, some code is compiled in
test classes automatically, and it seems Author>>fullName assumes one
must provide initials before compiling anything or the system will not
continue to work.
[fullName isEmptyOrNil ] whileTrue: [self requestFullName].
2009/9/27 Stéphane Ducasse <[email protected]>:
> Ok now if you want people to use it provide a loader that loads
> everything.
> Because so far I could not make it work. Because extra packages are
> missin.
>
> Stef
>
> On Sep 27, 2009, at 2:12 PM, Hernán Morales Durand wrote:
>
>> That's one idea. Although there are many applications. I'm using it
>> now to test a translator from Smalltalk to PQF (an insane query
>> language), but the course of acquisition of a natural language is a
>> very complex process, so a linguist can write a translator which
>> display dynamically inflectional systems differences between English
>> and Greek or Chinese, or a WordNet application which suggest synonyms
>> to a writer as he writes, or a logician which desires to show his
>> students calculus applied to a "lingua characteristica", i.e. it is
>> not limited to computer or constructed languages. Use your imagination
>> :)
>>
>> For the Smalltalk to Java part, I've just included a translator
>> available in the SqueakSource repository, I'm not so concerned about
>> the correcteness of a translator but if the author wants to include a
>> warning before usage of his tool I will happily include it.
>>
>> One motivation for STicky were the arguments of some Java developers I
>> know, they told me they've felt lost inside Smalltalk (they've never
>> seen a Programming System as an autonomic system with global behavior,
>> etc. but as a process which deals with dead text code) and since
>> language is a means for referring objects rather than the object
>> itself, this tool can show the referent sources of their language, if
>> a translator exists of course.
>> Cheers,
>>
>> Hernán
>>
>> 2009/9/27 Stéphane Ducasse <[email protected]>:
>>> But for beginner what is the difference between that and a Smalltalk
>>> interpreter.
>>> The idea is that they can compare with their own language the
>>> smalltalk syntax?
>>> it could work now when trnaslating to Java you can generate really
>>> bad
>>> code to
>>> express smalltalk syntax?
>>>
>>> Stef
>>>
>>> On Sep 26, 2009, at 11:26 PM, Andrey Larionov wrote:
>>>
>>>> Its an awesome. It what i want cause i smalltalk beginer
>>>>
>>>> On Sun, Sep 27, 2009 at 01:20, Hernán Morales Durand
>>>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>>> is a pluggable real-time evaluator and/or translator workspace
>>>>
>>>
>>>
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>>>
>>
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