Le 16 avr. 2015 11:56, "Tudor Girba" <tu...@tudorgirba.com
<mailto:tu...@tudorgirba.com>> a écrit :
>
> Great job!
>
> Thank you everyone for the contributions, support and trust.
One more out of the door.
That's great.
Anyone interested in doing a podcast episode on this releasr?
Chime in.
Phil
>
> Cheers,
> Doru
>
>
> On Thu, Apr 16, 2015 at 11:29 AM, Esteban Lorenzano
<esteba...@gmail.com <mailto: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
>>
>>
>
>
>
> --
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>
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