Smalltalk for Lispers Introduction Besides the fundamental difference of function-oriented versus object oriented, Smalltalk shares a lot of other aspects, ideas and mechanisms with the Lisp programming language and systems. This document shows some of them. Please try to understand them - even if you are not a lisper, and even though some of them seem to be of academic interest only ;-) It may al
Dan Ingalls: Seven (give or take) Smalltalk implementations - 1:28:31 - Oct 23, 2005 Stanford University - www.stanford.edu/class/ee380/Abstracts/0110 () Rate: About the talk: The nice thing about a language that takes hold is that you can work with it again and again. In 30 years we have built Sma...all » About the talk: The nice thing about a language that takes hold is that you can work with i
thoughts on Smalltalk and programming in general... Sometimes a small sample is really helpful in showing the differences between two approaches. Ruby on Rails is a slick web framework for building web applications the old way. When I say the old way, I mean building URLs manually and passing parameters through query strings manually, i.e. marshaling session data manually. Rails automatically maps
I started to be fed up to see all the books I like to be out of print, so I started to contact authors and collect their old books. I would like to thanks them all and their publishers as well. If you know an author that is willing to give to the community a book, please give him my email. You can support me. Thanks in advance. Recent Pharo books You can find a lot more recent and free books at ht
We talk to David Simmons, developer of S#, about Smalltalk, Ruby, .NET and dynamic languages on the web⦠S# (âS-Sharpâ) is a superset/dialect of classic Smalltalk-98 which offers transparent cross-language integration and component based deployment. With a new version of S# on the horizon, we decided it was time to get the inside info from the man at the top... Huw: I havenât noticed much signs of
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Sorry, Squeak Swiki has moved to 'http://wiki.squeak.org/squeak/5851'. Please update any bookmarks. Squeak 3.7 :: Comanche 7.0.2 :: Swiki 1.5
I ran across this interesting Podcast - it's a regular Ruby On Rails podcast, but this one spoke with Josh Susser, who came out of Xerox (not Parc) with a Smalltalk application background. There's some interesting talk about how Ruby is similar to Smalltalk, and in how it differs. I'd be curious to know whether Josh has looked at Smalltalk recently - I'd love to hear his take on Seaside, for insta
By Dave Thomas Reprinted from Celebrating 25 Years of Smalltalk, SIGS Publications. Smalltalk is much more than a programming language, it is a complete environment that represents the true philosophy of open, user-driven computing. Smalltalk provides an environment that makes programming fun for young and old, and it shields us from the plethora of APIs and technology our industry calls prog
Derive Your Dreams çµç±ã§ã http://research.sun.com/projects/plrg/fortress0866.pdf Traits are named program constructs that declare sets of methods. They were introduced in the Self programming language, and their semantic properties (and advantages over conventional class inheritance) were analyzed by Schärli, Ducasse, Nierstrasz, and Black [23]. In Fortress, a method declared by a trait may be eithe
Little Smalltalk 㧠VM ã®ã½ã¼ã¹ãçºãã¦ãããããããã(é)㨠Squeak VM ããã«ãããããªã£ãã®ã§ãããåå¿è ã«ã¯ã¨ãã¦ãç¡çã£ã½ãã£ãã®ã§ãå¤é¨ãã©ã°ã¤ã³ï¼OS X åãã«ã¯ ââ.bundle ã¨ããããã¤ãä»®æ³ãã·ã³ã¬ãã«ã§ Squeak ã·ã¹ãã ã®æ©è½ãæ¡å¼µããï¼ã®ãã«ãã§ææ ¢ãã¦ãããã¨ãã¾ããã以ä¸ã¯ãã®ã¡ã¢ã ããããã¨åèã«ããã¦ããã ãã¾ããããããã¨ããããã¾ãã Squeaker's Scrapbook - MacOSXçVMã®ãã«ãã«ã¤ã㦠èªç±èªå¨ Sqeuak ããã°ã©ãã³ã° - 14 ç« ãVM ãã©ã°ã¤ã³ã®ä½æ ã©ç´ 人ã®ããã®ã©ç´ 人ã«ããSqueakå ¥é - VM Plugin ï¼ã¡ãããã - [èäºæ¨©]ãããã¼ãã»ã¹ã¯ã¤ã¼ã¯[ã¢ã©ã³ã»ã±ã¤] (387-391) VMMaker ã®ã¤ã³ã¹ãã¼ã« Squeak ã·ã¹ãã ãèµ·åãã
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home mvc MVC XEROX PARC 1978-79 I spent a very happy and inspiring year as a visiting scientist with the Learning Research Gorup (LRG) at Xerox PARC from the summer og 1978 to the summer of 1979. This group was dedicated to Alan Kay's vision of the Dynabook; a portable computer that should contain all data of interest to its owner/user. Very importantly, these data included the programs the owner
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