great work people, keep pushing forward, sky is the limit :) a minor mistake in the website
"Check the annonucement <http://pharo.org/news/pharo-4.0-released>, and the ChangeLogs <https://github.com/pharo-project/pharo-changelogs/blob/master/Pharo40ChangeLogs.md> ." should be "announcement" On Thu, Apr 16, 2015 at 12:29 PM, Esteban Lorenzano <esteba...@gmail.com> wrote: > Please spread widely. > Sorry for multiple posts. > > (this post can be see here: http://pharo.org/news/pharo-4.0-released) > > Dear World, > > Pharo 4.0 (http://www.pharo.org) is here. > > Pharo is a pure object-oriented programming language and a powerful > environment, focused on simplicity and immediate feedback. > > Many things have changed in Pharo. Here are some highlights: > - Inspector/Playground/Spotter are new moldable development tools for > inspecting, coding and searching objects. > - Slots model instance variables as first class entities and enable > meta-programming on this level. > - ShoreLine reporter introduces a way to report system errors and collect > statistics, that we will use for future improvements > - Dark theme. > > These are just the more prominent highlights, but the details are just as > important. We have closed 1697 issues in Pharo 4. Take a moment to go > through a more detailed recount of the progress: > > > https://github.com/pharo-project/ChangeLogs/blob/master/Pharo40ChangeLogs.md > > Pharo is improving on many fronts, but one of the most prominent changes > is the addition of moldable tools for inspection and search. These tools > provide extension mechanisms that allow every object to define ways in > which it can be understood effectively. To provide an idea of the impact of > the already existing extensions, the map below shows the Pharo classes > grouped in packages, highlighting in red those parts of the system that > have at least one such custom view coming with the main distribution. The > spread of these extensions shows that moldability is powerful mechanism > that can be used in many contexts. > > > Remember that Pharo is your platform. We thank all the contributors of > this release: > > Clara Allende, Jean-Baptiste Arnaud, Jean-Christophe Bach, Philippe Back, > Clement Bera, Alexandre Bergel, Torsten Bergmann, Vincent Blondeau, Noury > Bouraqadi, Santiago Bragagnolo, Johan Brichau, Sven Van Caekenberghe, > Damien Cassou, Nicolas Cellier, Guido Chari, Dimitris Chloupis, Andrei > Chis, Ben Coman, Bernardo Contreras, Tommaso Dal Sasso, Jan Van De Sandt, > Christophe Demarey, Sean DeNigris, Marcus Denker, Martin Dias, Stephane > Ducasse, Stephan Eggermont, Luc Fabresse, Johan Fabry, Hilaire Fernandes, > Jerome Garcia, Tudor Girba, Thierry Goubier, Jigyasa Grover, Kris Gybels, > Norbert Hartl, Dale Henrichs, Pablo Herrero, Nicolai Hess, Pavel Krivanek, > Juraj Kubelka, Jan Kurs, Laurent Laffont, Jannik Laval, Kevin Lanvin, Max > Leske, David Lewis, Diego Lont, Esteban Lorenzano, Tim Mackinnon, Attila > Magyar, Esteban Maringolo, Stefan Marr, Max Mattone, Martin Mc Clure, Eliot > Miranda, Alain Plantec, Guillermo Polito, Damien Pollet, Stefan Reichhart, > Mark Rizun, Udo Schneider, Ignacio Sniechowski, Henrik Sperre Johansen, > Igor Stasenko, Aliaksei Syrel, Ciprian Teodorov, Camille Teruel, Sebastian > Tleye, Yuriy Tymchuk, Peter Uhnak, Andres Valloud, Sven Van Caekenberghe, > Thomas Vincent, Jan Vrany, Martin Walk, Richard Wettel, Dmitri Zagidulin > > And all those who contributed indirectly, by reporting bugs, participating > in discussion threads, providing feedback... > > Pharo 4.0 is another big step. And, the best is yet to come. > > Enjoy! > The Pharo Team > >