Peter, Yes, the highest numbered .mcz file is the latest.
In the appendix, I describe the different ways you can get the code, in order of increasing complexity - you took the latest ;-) Anyway, I hope you figure it out. Sven On 26 Jun 2014, at 08:50, Peter Gragert <pkhgrag...@gmail.com> wrote: > Sven, not used Pharo for a long time, I forgot nearly all of it ... so I need > help how to activate YOUR *.mcz files > and what does the different numbers mean? Version ... so ... one should > always try the latest or all?? > > > 2014-06-25 23:23 GMT+02:00 Tudor Girba <tu...@tudorgirba.com>: > This really is beautiful! > > Doru > > > On Wed, Jun 25, 2014 at 3:29 PM, Sven Van Caekenberghe <s...@stfx.eu> wrote: > Hi, > > I have written a new, extensive, long form, introductory article about Pharo. > > Rediscovering the UX of the legendary HP-35 Scientific Pocket Calculator > > A tutorial on Pharo, test and specification based immersive programming > > > https://medium.com/@svenvc/rediscovering-the-ux-of-the-legendary-hp-35-scientific-pocket-calculator-d1d497ece999 > > > It is a bit different because > > - it is based on a non-trivial example > - it uses a backdrop story unrelated to Pharo > - it uses several multimedia elements > - it is published on medium.com which is a general publishing platform > > The appendix describes several ways you can get the code. I think building > both a Spec and Seaside UI from the same specification as well as reusing > functional tests in different contexts is cool. Anyway, I hope you enjoy it. > > Sven > > -- > Sven Van Caekenberghe > Proudly supporting Pharo > http://pharo.org > http://association.pharo.org > http://consortium.pharo.org > > > > > -- > www.tudorgirba.com > > "Every thing has its own flow" >