iceberg
factor
iceberg | factor | |
---|---|---|
5 | 59 | |
133 | 1,585 | |
0.0% | 0.8% | |
9.1 | 9.8 | |
12 days ago | 3 days ago | |
Smalltalk | Factor | |
MIT License | BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
iceberg
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LSP could have been better
The problem with the filesystem is that it privileges organization scheme which isn’t the best one for every editing task. This makes, for example, implementation inheritance hard because your class has a bunch of invisible code in it. But, it you could expand all the superclass methods into a single view and then have edits automatically integrated into the appropriate places, this wouldn’t be as much of a problem.
Java’s filesystem hierarchy is a great example of a “fileout” format for the sort of environment I’m talking about. Another example here is smalltalk repositories generated by Iceberg: https://github.com/pharo-vcs/iceberg
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Pharo 11, the pure object-oriented language and environment is released!
and looking at sample git commit (I assume this was done in Iceberg): https://github.com/pharo-vcs/iceberg/pull/1687/files
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Stop Writing Dead Programs
By committing the code to a git repo and having a code review like every other language out there.
I'm guessing you have never tried these things but image based Smalltalk implementations have supported VCS for decades now, literally. In Pharo this is with git using Iceberg:
https://github.com/pharo-vcs/iceberg
They even wrote a tutorial to make it easier: https://github.com/pharo-vcs/iceberg/wiki/Tutorial
It's not magic, it's not even a problem, because the problem you're imagining doesn't actually exist. So long as the user of the system has at least half a brain (and maybe less) they will be capable of distributing their code with git these days.
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Design Principles Behind Smalltalk (2001)
Iceberg for Pharo: https://github.com/pharo-vcs/iceberg
Monticello: http://www.wiresong.ca/monticello/
I haven't used the latter, but the former is easy to use and based on libgit. Create a new repository, select the packages that go into it, make the initial commit. After that it'll tell you when the changes don't match the repo. You can select down to the method level since it's aware of the language's syntax and semantics. The generated repository looks like the Iceberg repo itself, a collection of directories for the packages and then .st files for the classes and their contents.
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Pharo 10
> a copy of your code the environment does some extra epicycles to copy it outside
Iceberg https://github.com/pharo-vcs/iceberg is the Git/etc. integration built into Pharo and works extremely well. You don't need to "file out" code if that's what you meant.
factor
- An Exploration of SBCL Internals (2020)
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My history with Forth, and stack machines
My impression so far is (in general), Forth are practically limited to doing embedded/microcontroller development.
For us, web/mobile/desktop app devs, beside:
- 8th (https://8th-dev.com)
- Factor (https://factorcode.org)
Any suggestion which implementation we should look for?
- Forth: The programming language that writes itself: The Web Page
- Retro: A Modern, Pragmatic Forth
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Pharo 11, the pure object-oriented language and environment is released!
Factor is also very much worth a look. Forth-style syntax, but with many of the ideas from CL and Smalltalk as well. In fact as a CL fan, I was very impressed by it. It's also quite "batteries included" a la Python.
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The toki pona of programming.
Otherwise, and more seriously, I'm not completely sure variables are needed. Factor is quite usable (it's my favorite go-to language if I quickly need to script something), and mostly doesn't have them.
- Forth as an intermediate language
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A Dynamic Forth Compiler for WebAssembly
There's a note on the page from 2022-08-19, that a lot has been added to it. It also links to the github page[1] for the up-to-date changes.
I am a Lisp, April, APL/J/BQE, and Forth[2] aficionado. I did some file munging programs in Factor back in 2012 at my job to sort through theater attendance logs in Word to compile statistics.
[1] https://github.com/remko/waforth
[2] https://factorcode.org/
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What the hell is Forth? (2019)
Is there any "battery-included" ANS Forth (more or less like Python/Go) which provides access to concurrency, networking, database, GUI, etc?
Not an embedded device programmer, but mostly deals with frontend apps, and occasionally backend, so those are very relevant to me.
Or perhaps use "non-traditional" Forths like 8th (https://8th-dev.com) or Factor (https://factorcode.org)?
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-🎄- 2022 Day 2 Solutions -🎄-
Here's my day two solution using Factor
What are some alternatives?
gtoolkit - Glamorous Toolkit is the Moldable Development environment. It empowers you to make systems explainable through experiences tailored for each problem.
jonesforth - Mirror of JONESFORTH
REPLEndpoint - A RESTful endpoint that behaves like a REPL
durexforth - Modern C64 Forth
PharoChipDesigner - A little chip design game inspired by KOHCTPYKTOP: Engineer of the People by Zachtronics
bondi - source code for the bondi programming language
pharo - The Sources for Pharo
Raylib-CsLo - autogen bindings to Raylib 4.x and convenience wrappers on top. Requires use of `unsafe`
PharoByExample9 - The version of Pharo by Example for Pharo 90
oil - Oils is our upgrade path from bash to a better language and runtime. It's also for Python and JavaScript users who avoid shell!
Parasol - Testing web apps in Smalltalk using Selenium WebDriver.
batteries-included - Batteries Included project