Tom Glod wrote:
> I feel like nothing out there, LC related, feels like its maintained
> of kept up to date.
True dat, though there are a few.
LiveCode Journal has been fallow too long for a couple reasons: it's a
lot of work to keep fresh content flowing, and ultimately I found that
content
Hi Alex, thank you for your detailed reply. I appreciate it.
I think you are right . I too don't have a lot of interest going down
this road if no one wants it.
I feel like nothing out there, LC related, feels like its maintained of
kept up to date.
Livecode themselves don't really have much
On 07/07/2020 18:46, Tom Glod via use-livecode wrote:
Hi Folks,
For years I have owned the domain "lovelivecode.com". At one point I lost
it, but decided to buy it again a few months ago.
...
Recently,I am seeing the glaring need in the community (also touched on by
recent threads):
Yes, I a
I was wondering if anyone has tried to
download any version of LiveCode from
the website recently. I just tried today
and it is glacially slow.
I’m also running into a problem where
version 9.5.1 which used to work fine
is now complaining that the license
isn’t any good anymore. I tried the
manu
Hey all.
Just received notification from github that the LCGitHubLib app will no longer
be available on github from October. I’m sure the relevant coders have also
been notified but will this have impact on our own repository forks. We have
till October so there’s no rush. I’m just starting th
Hi Andre!
As others have pointed out, whether to go for a text based or a video based
course, very much depends on your target audience. I like Richards proposal of
using LiveCode as the framework for a course. This way you can in fact utilize
the strengths of both formats. You can present most
My immediate response is anything but video !!
I hate video - can't find things, no indexing, can't fast forward
effectively over the bits I know or more-or-less know, need audio which
doesn't always fit my surroundings,
But that doesn't mean video is without its advantages - someti
Books for me - either phyical or eBook. Although video might have a support
role.
I’ve learned several programming languages over the years and the practical
value of having a well indexed book open beside the computer so I can go back
and forth leaving the development environment open on my co
Hi
A proper up to date guide for LiveCode is what has been needed for years.
Digital or paper. I used to love paper manuals and guides but more so get PDFs
these days.
Sean Cole
Pi Digital
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P
Andre, given the average age of the users here, I'd be curious to know what
the responses are if you asked the same question on another forum for any
popular programming language.
--
Jacqueline Landman Gay | jac...@hyperactivesw.com
HyperActive Software | http://www.hyperactivesw.com
On July 7,
I Agree, Books. For the most part the only videos I watch are music related.
Other than that I read much faster.
I watch a video only after the narrative needs additional details
(car/electronics/instrument... repairs).
Ralph DiMola
IT Director
Evergreen Information Services
rdim...@evergreeninfo.
Hi Folks,
For years I have owned the domain "lovelivecode.com". At one point I lost
it, but decided to buy it again a few months ago.
I called it that because I often found myself saying "I love livecode"
while working inside of it, due to its massive strong points in desktop app
development.
Andre Garzia wrote:
> In my own personal and subjective experience, LiveCode shines when you
> are building desktop applications, or combining desktop applications
> with server-side solutions. With LiveCode you can have a webapp doing
> server-side LC server and an HTML5 front-end, while still
Books. I read much faster than video playback, and a book allows me to skip
around easily and look up topics of interest. I rarely have time to sit
through a whole video unless it's very short. Books hold my interest better.
I think younger people are used to receiving information differently.
Andre Garzia wrote:
> I'm just not exactly sure if you prefer to consume content in book
> format or video format.
I've been pondering this myself with some content I've been putting
together for the LC community, an EDU-leaning beginner's guide and one
on networking.
Given the power and fle
Andre,
I forgot my main learning interest book.
Livecode for Web designers.
Bill
William Prothero
http://es.earthednet.org
> On Jul 7, 2020, at 9:28 AM, Andre Garzia via use-livecode
> wrote:
>
> Hey Folks,
>
> I have been working on some new LC content to sell. I want to transition my
> ca
Hi Andre,
Book. Always.
And paperback I prefer instead of an e-book version.
I have noticed that my concentration is better by reading a real book.
Kind regards and good luck!
Erik
-Original Message-
From: use-livecode On Behalf Of
Andre Garzia via use-livecode
Sent: dinsdag 7 juli 2020
Andre,
What I like about books is that I can go back to them easily and find Gems, if
there is a good index. Videos work for me, if they are short. It also depends
on your target audience. If you are going for experienced Livecode programmers,
I suspect a highly indexed online “Book” that is sea
Hey Folks,
I have been working on some new LC content to sell. I want to transition my
career into content production and I think there is an unserved demand for
quality content for our beloved language.
I'm just not exactly sure if you prefer to consume content in book format
or video format. My
On 7/6/20 3:39 PM, Mark Talluto via use-livecode wrote:
You know you have arrived when there are forks of your works in the wild.
Trust the forks, Luke...
--
Mark Wieder
ahsoftw...@gmail.com
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> In my own personal and subjective experience, LiveCode shines when you are
> building desktop applications, or combining desktop applications with
> server-side solutions.
> With LC you can ship a whole suite of desktop and mobile apps that act as
> companions to the business your client is doi
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