There's been a locale browser for J circa some j40x ~1999,
It's part of okole package:

  http://olegykj.sourceforge.net/scrshots/okole-shot.html

Presently, it runs on Windows only, as it requires OLE.

I have been thinking of adapting it to the new grid.


--- Joe Tibollo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Chris:
>  
> Thanks for answering my question.  
>  
> Its been many years since I last looked at J.  I have worked with J for about 
> the last 3 weeks. 
> It now looks like many of the impediments that kept me away from J have been 
> addressed.  I am
> glad to see better documentation on the GUI interface, the debugger is very 
> nice, the form
> builder is great, and the project manager (still a bit early) seems a bit 
> difficult (but I
> intend to keep at it).  The one big hole for me is something (a built in 
> facility) for managing
> locales.  I like the J implementation of locales.  However, J could really 
> benefit from having
> an explorer facility similar to Dialog APL for managing locales.  Something 
> that would display
> all locales and show their contents.  Maybe that will get added down the 
> line.  For the most
> part J is becoming better and better.
>  
> Regards,
> Joe
>  
>  
> 
>       -----Original Message----- 
>       From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Chris Burke 
>       Sent: Tue 14/11/2006 10:07 PM 
>       To: Programming forum 
>       Cc: 
>       Subject: Re: [Jprogramming] Deploying an application to a computer 
> which doesnot already have J
> installed
>       
>       
> 
>       Joe
>       
>       You did everything right, but there is a bug in J6 when creating
>       standalone apps with Plot - thanks for bringing this to our attention.
>       
>       Plot requires several other files, and not all are being included in a
>       standalone app, so right now, including Plot means including the full
>       development system. I will get this fixed.
>       
>       To answer your other questions, I just put up a wiki page that should
>       help, see: 
> http://www.jsoftware.com/jwiki/Guides/Standalone_Applications.
>       
>       Chris
>       
>       Joe Tibollo wrote:
>       >
>       > I followed the lab that created a new application without any
>       > difficulties.  However, when I tried to move the j.exe, j.dll and
>       > run.exe to a computer without J (already) installed, I kept getting 
> the
>       > message "Error and no IDE window for debugging".  (It works just fine
>       > when I run from "D:\J601\user\projects\first" )
>       >
>       > I reviewed the archives to see if this error message has occurred
>       > before.  Apparently it has.  I am right to conclude that the complete 
> J
>       > developement environment must be installed on a computer before a
>       > runtime (i.e. minimal) system can be installed?  By runtime, I don't
>       > mean using the j runtime which I gather no longer exists but rather
>       > installing only the files absolutely necessary alone.
>       >
>       > Also, I installed j.exe and j.dll on a host computer and clicked on
>       > j.exe.  To my surprise J.exe would not run (it displayed the same 
> error
>       > message as given above).
>       >
>       > Is there something special about how J.exe (and j.dll) are installed
>       > that I need to know about?
>       >
>       > Also, if you need the entire development environment installed for a
>       > runtime application, why bother to use the Project Manager to
>       > consolidate all scripts into a single runtime script?
>       >
>       > Is there some documentation that outlines the minimum (file)
>       > requirements to run J?



 
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