On Tue, 14 Jul 2009, Adam Strzelecki wrote: > Francois, > > > I've seen some Obj-C code and it looks really weird. Of course I've > > never 'learned' to program it so it's probably normal. But it's > > certainly the case that only developpers who know Obj-C can work on it. > > Contrast this with the current situation where as soon as you know C you > > can work on any area of Wine. > > Look, anyway Obj-C is supposed to be used in Wine only for Mac support, and > not for anything else. Any developer that knows how to program Mac knows Obj-C > so there's nothing wrong with constraint that only developers that know Obj-C > can work on it, because those are guys that know how to program Mac. > Or by contradiction... even if the code was written in pure-C, non-Obj-C > developers wouldn't be able to work on it anyway because they wouldn't know > OSX API and wouldn't have Mac machine for development :)
I have never done any OpenGL programming, and yet I can detect and fix issues in the OpenGL or Direct3D code, such as make functions static, avoid unneeded forward dependencies, fix compilation warnings, etc. But I don't think I could do this type of thing if the code were Objective-C. So no, even if the code is only for Macs, writing it in Obj-C will cut you off from some developpers. And yes, I have a Mac (and I'm as good at Mac development as I am at OpenGL development). -- Francois Gouget <fgou...@free.fr> http://fgouget.free.fr/ "Utilisateur" (nom commun) : Mot utilisé par les informaticiens en lieu et place d'"idiot".