Rafael Luque wrote
> I wonder if there are other relevant projects I could study to discover
> other possible
> uses cases of Magritte.
I use it in nearly all my personal projects, almost always via Morphic, not
Seaside. Here is a public one you can have a look at:
https://github.com/seandenigris/
On 21 April 2018 at 03:51, Hilaire wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Out of curiosity.
>
> I always found the #min:max: confusing and lost in its expressiveness.
>
> One should write:
>
> 10 min: 48 max: 12
>
> to expect 12.
>
> but logically one (at least me) may want to express it as:
>
> 10 min: 12 max
On Fri, Apr 20, 2018 at 07:08:29AM -0700, Sean P. DeNigris wrote:
> Stephane Ducasse-3 wrote
> > I like when developers are talking about names:
> > They use a mac and not a computer, they were nike, lewis and not shoes
> > and pants
> > So guys can we focus our energy on positive things.
>
>
That would definitely help if Pharo shed some of its elitism with fancy
names.
Then it would have much more appeal for the masses (and definitely increase
popularity of Smalltalk) but it is the intent of the community, that's the
question.
On Fri, Apr 20, 2018 at 4:09 PM, Benoit St-Jean via Pharo-
On April 21, 2018 12:12:10 AM GMT+02:00, Chris Cunningham
wrote:
>A name like this would be clearer (although much more annoying):
>
>returnAtLeast: minValue butNoMoreThan: maxValue
>10 returnAtLeast: 12 butNoMoreThan: 48
#beBetween:and:
or
#boundedBetween:and:
>Thanks,
>cbc
>
>On Fri, Ap
A name like this would be clearer (although much more annoying):
returnAtLeast: minValue butNoMoreThan: maxValue
10 returnAtLeast: 12 butNoMoreThan: 48
Thanks,
cbc
On Fri, Apr 20, 2018 at 12:51 PM, Hilaire wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Out of curiosity.
>
> I always found the #min:max: confusing and lo
--- Begin Message ---
I concur with Sean's comments. The problem is not using names : the problem is
for new users.
A very quick look at what's in Pharo 7 shows the following names : Iceberg,
Ombu, Calypso, Flashback, Nautilus, Renraku, Zodiac, Shift, Zinc, Hermes,
Beacon, Cargo, Hermes, Opal,
Hi all,
I'm studying Magritte reading the booklet, Seaside book chapter about it,
and the source code in the image.
Until now the examples I've found are related with Seaside. I wonder if
there are other relevant projects I could study to discover other possible
uses cases of Magritte.
Thank you
Hi,
Out of curiosity.
I always found the #min:max: confusing and lost in its expressiveness.
One should write:
10 min: 48 max: 12
to expect 12.
but logically one (at least me) may want to express it as:
10 min: 12 max: 48
Then when reading its source code, it is even more confusing
> On 20 Apr 2018, at 20:42, Herbert Vojčík wrote:
>
> Hi all!
>
> Somehow intuitively I presume the subject line to return #bar, but it fails
> with ByteString not knowing min:, in Pharo 6.1.
>
> Is it a bug, bug fixed in Pharo 7, or a feature?
>
> Herby
I would say that should work.
Stri
Hi all!
Somehow intuitively I presume the subject line to return #bar, but it
fails with ByteString not knowing min:, in Pharo 6.1.
Is it a bug, bug fixed in Pharo 7, or a feature?
Herby
Hi,
I was trying garage, but I was using the instructions for installation from
here: https://guillep.github.io/DBXTalk/garage/installation.html
I was able to load garage from https://github.com/pharo-rdbms, but the
method described at
https://guillep.github.io/DBXTalk/garage/installation.html fo
Stephane Ducasse-3 wrote
> I like when developers are talking about names:
> They use a mac and not a computer, they were nike, lewis and not shoes
> and pants
> So guys can we focus our energy on positive things.
IHMO this is certainly a positive subject because it highlights the
as-yet-to-be
At the time my company tested Pharo to access Oracle databases, the
OpenDBX driver support was lousy and it was hard to make it work in
Windows. Also Garage isn't tested against it.
So our resolution was that Oracle isn't supported by any driver for
Pharo unless you are in Windows and can use ODBC
>
> On this matter, when I named my project, "Grafoscopio" I thought in
> something evocative and unique, because of the Spanish words "grafo"
> (graph) and grafía[1][2] (graphy, related with writing like in
> "ortografía" "orthography". After naming it I discover there was a old
> device related w
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