You have to write a javascript interpreter - lots of work.
On Nov 3, 2007, at 7:22 PM, Ikem Nzeribe wrote:
Hi all ;-)
I'm pretty new to Squeak, and am just trying to assess what I can do.
I know there's a web browser for Squeak, but I was wondering if there
is any way to handle Javascript in t
Hi Ikem,
I believe you are looking for Seaside. Seaside supports Ajax. Have a look
at www.seaside.st . You get all the JavaScript you want plus more!
Hmm, I was just reading your email more carefully. So to be clear this
would give you the ability to use an external browser to access a Sque
Actually, there is one in OMeta if I'm informed correctly. And "lots
of work" depends on your tools, that implementation of js is rumored
to be incredibly small.
- Bert -
On Nov 4, 2007, at 3:55 , Todd Blanchard wrote:
You have to write a javascript interpreter - lots of work.
On Nov 3, 2
Yeah, but you still have to implement the standard DOM and integrate
it into the interpreter - still lots of work.
On Nov 4, 2007, at 3:00 PM, Bert Freudenberg wrote:
Actually, there is one in OMeta if I'm informed correctly. And
"lots of work" depends on your tools, that implementation of j
Bert Freudenberg wrote:
Actually, there is one in OMeta if I'm informed correctly. And "lots
of work" depends on your tools, that implementation of js is rumored
to be incredibly small.
- Bert -
Smalltalk/X includes a Javascript to Smalltalk bytecode compiler. I
don't know if they have a DO