o you get the impression that Guile is described as "just" an
> extension language?
This thread is about the logo baseline, which is: “GNU extension
language”. I agree that the web site is clearer; I’m just talking about
the logo here.
>>> Actually I’d love to see Guile become
Matt Wette writes:
> On 1/19/20 6:11 AM, Arne Babenhauserheide wrote:
>> Ludovic Courtès writes:
>>> Other adjectives I proposed (fast, functional) don’t quite apply to
>>> these, though.
>> Functional doesn’t apply to Guile much better than to CPython.
>
> I think "functional" is used in the
On 1/19/20 6:11 AM, Arne Babenhauserheide wrote:
Ludovic Courtès writes:
Other adjectives I proposed (fast, functional) don’t quite apply to
these, though.
Functional doesn’t apply to Guile much better than to CPython.
I think "functional" is used in the formal sense.
The term applies to
Ludovic Courtès writes:
> Like I wrote, Guile remains an extension language, no argument here.
>
> However, describing it as “just” an extension language seems odd to me.
> It doesn’t take into account what many have been doing with Guile, and
> it doesn’t match the efforts that have gone into G
Hello!
Arne Babenhauserheide skribis:
> Thomas Morley writes:
>
>>> Clearly, Guile is still an extension language, with many great
>>> applications (Gnucash, Lepton-EDA, OpenCog, GDB, etc.)
>>
>> Well, you forgot LilyPond
>
> The one tool that uses Guile while dominating its domain.
Yup, I don
Ludovic Courtès writes:
> What’s about you? What’s Guile to you? :-)
Guile is the force that binds GNU together. Guile was intended to
extend (all) GNU programs, truly empowering the user. You made Guile
into a great language for writing programs. Now Guile even creates a
coherent GNU System
Thomas Morley writes:
>> Clearly, Guile is still an extension language, with many great
>> applications (Gnucash, Lepton-EDA, OpenCog, GDB, etc.)
>
> Well, you forgot LilyPond
The one tool that uses Guile while dominating its domain.
> Well, for me, Guile's _the_ extension language for my Lil
Am Sa., 18. Jan. 2020 um 15:14 Uhr schrieb Ludovic Courtès :
>
> Hello Guilers!
>
> The Guile logo has this “GNU extension language” baseline. As Guile 3
> came out, this baseline felt odd to me, not quite corresponding to the
> way I see Guile.
>
> Clearly, Guile is still an extension language, w
Ludovic Courtès writes:
> Hello Guilers!
>
> The Guile logo has this “GNU extension language” baseline. As Guile 3
> came out, this baseline felt odd to me, not quite corresponding to the
> way I see Guile.
What do you mean about the logo? Do you mean tagline? Where I see a
tagline is at the w
On Sat, Jan 18, 2020 at 10:14 PM Ludovic Courtès wrote:
> Hello Guilers!
>
Clearly, Guile is still an extension language, with many great
> applications (Gnucash, Lepton-EDA, OpenCog, GDB, etc.), and I’m sure
> libguile is here to stay. Yet, to me, “extension language” does not
> accurately cap
On 1/18/20 6:08 AM, Ludovic Courtès wrote:
Hello Guilers!
The Guile logo has this “GNU extension language” baseline. As Guile 3
came out, this baseline felt odd to me, not quite corresponding to the
way I see Guile.
Clearly, Guile is still an extension language, with many great
applications (G
Fun I can agree with! It is what made me stick with Guile in the first place.
GNU as an adjective seems odd: I think that can better be conveyed as a part of
the name "GNU Guile". It is and, if I have understood the discussions going on
here, will continue to be a GNU project. Maybe treat fun as
Le sam. 18 janv. 2020 à 15:14, Ludovic Courtès a écrit :
>
> Hello Guilers!
>
> The Guile logo has this “GNU extension language” baseline. As Guile 3
> came out, this baseline felt odd to me, not quite corresponding to the
> way I see Guile.
>
> Clearly, Guile is still an extension language, with
Hello Guilers!
The Guile logo has this “GNU extension language” baseline. As Guile 3
came out, this baseline felt odd to me, not quite corresponding to the
way I see Guile.
Clearly, Guile is still an extension language, with many great
applications (Gnucash, Lepton-EDA, OpenCog, GDB, etc.), and
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