> Chris. Metacello scripts are object specs and to me this is just great > because they are objects > and with objects we can do a lot. Checking, transforming...... So of course > hacking a little script is fast and > Metacello requires some care but I can tell you that for us this is **hyper** > important (and not just > as some person may think because we like complex stuff - because this is > plain wrong) > because Metacello are first class ***objects*** scripts.
I am an objectician almost to a fault. I tend to want to solve every problem with a object model. Everyone knows I love objects. But I also view software as a _means_ not an end. A means to do something in the real world that I want done. In this case, I simply want to do Configuration. Configuration is not just about loading packages; it's about _configuring_ a system. It's about taking a VM + Legacy-Image and configuring it to do something practical in the real-world. If "Legacy-Image" is our dream super-stripped 1MB Spoon type of image; an image with just a Compiler and no MC or any tools, and I want to configure it for an embedded system, then this is where the Smalltalk-rubber hits the road: The person developing this type system will be configuring THAT image with a config-file, not an object-model. VM + Legacy-Image + config-file (config-file is just a .st, .sar, or anything else that can be interpreted by the Legacy-Image). Using an object-model in this case is counterproductive because just to be able to _interpret_ that (Metacello) object model, you have to load a gazillion packages into the image which is targeted to be embedded, just to "do" the configuring. This is why I think a "catalog of configuration files" is appropriate; so that the existence of this type of system can be documented alongside the existence of all other kinds of systems including Metacello-managed ones. Whether someone wants to bring Metacello into their life to do package management is their personal choice. But that is separate from having their application listed in The Catalog of ALL available Squeak (and, I hope, Pharo) titles in one place, regardless of whether they use Metacello or any other specific technology. - Chris
