Hi Al!
...I[t] should be and stay easy to use!
Thanks for that, you are right ;-)
As a C# developer it was very hard for me to see, that there is no usable IDE
for vala.
To start developing by my own(with vala) it was necessary to have something
like monoDevelop or VisualStudio
For me as a vala-newbie, it was very very very very hard to write that IDE,
help was not really avail.
So be aware for me it makes no difference if someone using it or not, I DO...
/Wolfgang
Am 22.02.19 um 18:57 schrieb Al Thomas via vala-list:
The screenshots make this look a nice tool. Good to see Vala getting some
new tooling.
> On Friday, 22 February 2019, 16:00:13 GMT, Wolfgang Mauer
<wolfgang.ma...@kabelmail.de> wrote:
The IDE is Freeware! At now there is no plan to make it OpenSource.
I have to make something clear:
...I[t] should be and stay easy to use!
You don't have to accept contributions to your project just because the source
code is availableand licensed to be re-used relatively openly. If the criteria
for accepting a contribution is it meets your design principles of what you
consider easy to use that is fine. Just say why you don't likeit if you get a
pull request. That's the power of being a maintainer, use it wisely ;)
Some people are wary of downloading and running binary blobs from a repository. Making
the sourceavailable means people can look over what they are building. The whole tool set
you are using islicensed in such a way: Vala, GTK+, GLib, GtkSourceView, Ubuntu, etc. If
nothing else it's worthbecoming more aware of why these projects are
"open"/free.
Nice work on the Vala front, thanks for starting to share your work.
All the best,
Al
_______________________________________________
vala-list mailing list
vala-list@gnome.org
https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/vala-list
_______________________________________________
vala-list mailing list
vala-list@gnome.org
https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/vala-list