My plans are of having Pharo as the primary platform and Groovy to support integration to the outside world of plethora of frameworks..
This will easily form the base for the Groovy ( syntax highlighted) simple editor.. !.. though complex work can move to eclipse... On Thu, Feb 2, 2012 at 11:42 AM, Tudor Girba <tu...@tudorgirba.com> wrote: > Hi, > > I would be interested in something like this, as well. > > Cheers, > Doru > > > > On 1 Feb 2012, at 21:30, Guillermo Polito wrote: > > > Hi Nahuel! > > > > Not long ago (young 1.3 I think) there was a transcript implementation > that showed line numbers(or something like that)... I don't know where to > find it now, but at least you have a hint to track down :). > > > > Saludos, > > Guille > > > > On Wed, Feb 1, 2012 at 12:19 PM, Nahuel Garbezza <n.garbe...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > > In Nautilus there is something similar which show how characters the > method is composed of. > > > > > > You should be able to hack it (PluggableTextMorphWithLimit) > > > > > > (Even if I think Igor's right ;) ) > > > > > > Ben > > > > > > > > > On Feb 1, 2012, at 4:11 PM, Igor Stasenko wrote: > > > > > >> On 1 February 2012 15:47, Nahuel Garbezza <n.garbe...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > >>> Hi all, > > >>> > > >>> Is there any text morph that shows line numbers? I mean something > like > > >>> that: > http://developer.qt.nokia.com/doc/qt-4.8/images/codeeditor-example.png > > >>> > > >> Dunno. And don't care :) > > >> > > >> Once you need a line numbers in smalltalk code, it means that you > > >> doing something wrong > > >> and your code needs to be refactored. > > >> > > > > Thanks for the answers (I agree with you) but I don't need this for > > Smalltalk code. > > > > Nahuel > > > > > > -- > www.tudorgirba.com > > "Obvious things are difficult to teach." > > > > >