The Commodore C64 emulator that was on the store was taken down by the
fact you could get to
Commodore Basic. I have read of other language supporters who have
attempted to get their language
into the store and failed.
But given the fact all the code is available someone could take a run
at
I wonder if a variation of that could be used in the iPhone as a legal
App Store app or apps. Since you're not actually trying to run (?) a
real program, but only learn the syntax of the language, would it get
around Apple's licensing issues for the iphone apps? Would be a pretty
decent "hook"
Hi Stef,
STicky is for Pharo and STickySq is for Squeak. I've decided to
provide two separate packages because it's easier for me to make
changes in each ST separately, without worring about collateral
consequences in another.
Cheers,
Hernán
2009/9/27 Stéphane Ducasse :
> what is the diff betwe
what is the diff between sticky and stickysq
I like the name...
On Sep 26, 2009, at 11:20 PM, Hernán Morales Durand wrote:
> STicky is a pluggable real-time evaluator and/or translator workspace
> aimed to learn languages. For a quick overview please take a look at
> the presentation video: htt
I'm confused Smalltalk to Java is not really a smalltalk to java but a
a minimal subset and it is quite slow.
Do you have a full smalltalk interpreter?
I'm looking for that (I would like to code one that deals with
explicit returns and exception
On Sep 26, 2009, at 11:20 PM, Hernán Morales Dura
STicky is a pluggable real-time evaluator and/or translator workspace
aimed to learn languages. For a quick overview please take a look at
the presentation video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b9uUIEaGyoU
The Smalltalk evaluator could be useful in learning courses or for
newbies typing expression