can you send the code that we play with it because I would like to learn how 
you do that.

Stef

On Feb 24, 2012, at 7:02 PM, S Krish wrote:

> I love Pharo's ability to mould/ twist in spare time something that is
> imminently usable..
> 
> Just playing around over an hour plus, I find this tree view grouping
> more convinient than current browsers in giving a coherent view that
> easily extends:
> 
> All editable code text morphs, spreading over to mutliple worlds one
> can traverse too if needed. or appears on tab anyways for each group.
> 
> a) Package, Class, Category , Hierarchy levels.
> 
> b) Senders, implementors ..
> 
> c) Arbitrary groups of methods if one desires to..
> 
> Can also include some class definition info bubble/ reduce noise
> through some more optimization to make it optimized
> 
> ... we can have a little customizations too to get a good grip of the
> whole as well as the part.
> 
> But I agree, Gaucho / Code Bubbles are nice, but I am afraid fo
> fragmented view it will still represented. May be each will have
> little twist of his predilictions and cannot be highly generalized.
> 
> 
> On 2/24/12, Igor Stasenko <[email protected]> wrote:
>> On 24 February 2012 00:18, Matias Garcia Isaia <[email protected]>
>> wrote:
>>> On Thu, Feb 23, 2012 at 5:08 PM, Mariano Martinez Peck
>>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>> Nooo!!! he comes from Java!! he starts with index 0. Kill him!!!  ;)
>>> 
>>> Ooops... Time to get a new identity :)
>>> 
>>> 
>>> On 23 February 2012 19:47, Stéphane Ducasse <[email protected]>
>>> wrote:
>>>> Sure we know.
>>>> And we also know that it requires effort and lot of people are talking.
>>> 
>>> I know there's a loooong way to see what CodeBubbles can do, and that
>>> requires to do a big effort, but imagined that some kind of
>>> alternative - I'm not sure that CB is **exactly** what I want (sure
>>> Java-ers want to see **something more** than just a file pimped with
>>> colours, but Smalltalk **allready has** much more than a text file -
>>> have real code)  - could be very less effort-consuming. Making the
>>> current browser (Nautilus? - newbie here :) ) pop a new
>>> ¿window?¿morph? showing a method instead of updating a single pane
>>> (the current one showing method's source) don't seems to be so "far"
>>> away to me.
>>> 
>>> Of course that's my point of view, based on what I imagine that could
>>> be. I should spend some time to see how it is implemented, and to see
>>> if it really is that simple, but anyway trust you if you say is a huge
>>> effort...
>>> 
>> 
>> Well, popping out a new morph every time you clicking around is easy part.
>> The hard part is to make this stuff really consistent and easy to use
>> for navigation and development.
>> It requires far more serious work than just spending 2 hours
>> implementing "bubbling" behavior.
>> 
>>> 
>>> Cheers :)
>>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> --
>> Best regards,
>> Igor Stasenko.
>> 
>> 
> <Pharo_CodeBrowser01.JPG>


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