> Being a newbie but having a development background with lower > level languages, I agree -completely-. It would be a great > bonus having at least some sort of crossover docs like c++ -> > Rev, from a coding point of view, its just that the syntax > and the way you think about everything is greatly different > compared to other languages. I've never stuggled so much with > another one, -but- I see that when (not > if) I get a handle on this that the development timeline goes > from months to weeks maybe even days. > I get ahead by looking at other revolution code ie: 3party > functions etc... and look and how the syntax is written. One > large searchable/nav stack (library) would be of -huge- > benefit to newbies like me. Joining this list is another > necessity as well.
This is where Marielle's site will be so useful. Finding everything one needs in one spot is the best way I know of assisting newbie coders. I've come from and IDE where everything (code wise) is openly available. Sure - some of it is (actually there is a lot) of commercial solutions too. To just "get the job done" is possible with twenty minutes of searching and checking the results. Searching for many Rev resources is much harder. Scott _______________________________________________ use-revolution mailing list [email protected] Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription preferences: http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution
