[#14464] who uses Python or Ruby, and for what? — ellard2@...01.fas.harvard.edu (-11,3-3562,3-3076)

A while ago I posted a request for people to share their experiences

12 messages 2001/05/01

[#14555] Ruby as a Mac OS/X scripting language — Dave Thomas <Dave@...>

10 messages 2001/05/02

[#14557] Arggg Bitten by the block var scope feature!!! — Wayne Scott <wscott@...>

13 messages 2001/05/02

[#14598] Re: Arggg Bitten by the block var scope feature!!! — "Conrad Schneiker" <schneik@...>

# On Thu, 3 May 2001, Wayne Scott wrote:

9 messages 2001/05/03

[#14636] Yet another "About private methods" question — Eric Jacoboni <jacoboni@...2.fr>

I'm still trying to figure out the semantics of private methods in Ruby.

39 messages 2001/05/04
[#14656] Re: Yet another "About private methods" question — Dave Thomas <Dave@...> 2001/05/04

Eric Jacoboni <jaco@teaser.fr> writes:

[#14666] Ruby and Web Applications — "Chris Montgomery" <monty@...> 2001/05/04

Greetings from a newbie,

[#14772] Re: Ruby and Web Applications — Jim Freeze <jim@...> 2001/05/07

On Sat, 5 May 2001, Chris Montgomery wrote:

[#14710] Why's Ruby so slow in this case? — Stefan Matthias Aust <sma@3plus4.de>

Sure, Ruby, being interpreted, is slower than a compiled language.

12 messages 2001/05/05

[#14881] Class/Module Information — "John Kaurin" <jkaurin@...>

It is possible to modify the following code to produce

18 messages 2001/05/09

[#15034] Re: calling .inspect on array/hash causes core dump — ts <decoux@...>

>>>>> "A" == Andreas Riedl <viisi@chello.at> writes:

15 messages 2001/05/12

[#15198] Re: Q: GUI framework with direct drawing ca pabilities? — Steve Tuckner <SAT@...>

Would it be a good idea to develop a pure Ruby GUI framework built on top of

13 messages 2001/05/15

[#15234] Pluggable sorting - How would you do it? — "Hal E. Fulton" <hal9000@...>

Hello all,

16 messages 2001/05/16

[#15549] ColdFusion for Ruby — "Michael Dinowitz" <mdinowit@...2000.com>

I don't currently use Ruby. To tell the truth, I have no real reason to. I'd

12 messages 2001/05/22

[#15569] I like ruby-chan ... — Rob Armstrong <rob@...>

Ruby is more human(e) than Python. We already have too many animals :-).

15 messages 2001/05/23

[#15601] How to avoid spelling mistakes of variable names — ndrochak@... (Nick Drochak)

Since Ruby does not require a variable to be declared, do people find

13 messages 2001/05/23

[#15734] java based interpreter and regexes — "Wayne Blair" <wayne.blair@...>

I have been thinking about the java based ruby interpreter project, and I

48 messages 2001/05/25

[#15804] is it possible to dynamically coerce objects types in Ruby? — mirian@... (Mirian Crzig Lennox)

Greetings to all. I am a newcomer to Ruby and I am exploring the

13 messages 2001/05/27
[#15807] Re: is it possible to dynamically coerce objects types in Ruby? — matz@... (Yukihiro Matsumoto) 2001/05/27

Hi,

[#15863] Experimental "in" operator for collections — Stefan Matthias Aust <sma@3plus4.de>

There's one thing where I prefer Python over Ruby. Testing whether an

13 messages 2001/05/28

[#15925] Re: Block arguments vs method arguments — ts <decoux@...>

>>>>> "M" == Mike <mike@lepton.fr> writes:

43 messages 2001/05/29
[#16070] Re: Block arguments vs method arguments — "Hal E. Fulton" <hal9000@...> 2001/05/31

----- Original Message -----

[#16081] Re: Block arguments vs method arguments — Sean Russell <ser@...> 2001/05/31

On Thu, May 31, 2001 at 11:53:17AM +0900, Hal E. Fulton wrote:

[#16088] Re: Block arguments vs method arguments — Dan Moniz <dnm@...> 2001/05/31

At 11:01 PM 5/31/2001 +0900, Sean Russell wrote:

[#15954] new keyword idea: tryreturn, tryturn or done — Juha Pohjalainen <voidjump@...>

Hello everyone!

12 messages 2001/05/29

[ruby-talk:15637] Re: Interactive Ruby II

From: Mathieu Bouchard <matju@...>
Date: 2001-05-24 02:38:43 UTC
List: ruby-talk #15637
On Thu, 24 May 2001, Mario Lang wrote:

> What I am thinking about is a Interactive Ruby IDE.

> But the interface indepence bothers me a bit. I cant find out
> how to structure a program from the grounds up well, so
> that different interfaces can be written for it later on without
> modification of the core.

Let me define both parts, Model and View.

The Model is the "core" of a system. What is common to all models is that
they all include Observable (from observer.rb) and they implement what is
required to make it work: every property that can be seen from outside,
when changed, must be announced (after the change) so that observers
can know when something has to be done.

The View is a layer you put between the Model and the User. It knows a
Model (via a property called #model) and it observes that Model, which
means the Model knows the View, but only in the way that an Observable
knows its observers. When the View decides to update what it presents to
the User, it queries the Model about its properties and presents that
information. 

Now I didn't say what is between the View and the User. We could call it a
Display and that Display needs not to be visual; it could be X11, NCurses,
a command-line interface, a voice-based system, anything. For a given kind
of Display you need a set of Views that make a bridge between the Display
and a fair amount of Models.


> Perhaps some project like this is already on the way (the ruby IDE)

I don't remember who planned to do one besides me but I haven't heard of
a serious initiative.

> If this apllies, I would be happy to join forces. And I would hope to
> convince the author of the importance of interface independence. 

You won't need to convince me.

> I have also found the textbuf extension, which I really liked.

My hope is that MetaRuby makes it easier to experiment in efficient
representations of strings. I'd like that loading a one meg text file in a
String results in a thousand actual Strings all linked together through
StringMixin. This is doable now but I'm not so hot in efficient data
structures so someone else would have to pick up MetaRuby and program such
a String class.

> Example, currently someone is writing the table.el extension for Emacs,
> which allows editing of tabular data. He uses many tricks to

If you want a "buffer" really based on a concept other than a String, then
probably that making it as general as a Model (see above) is a good idea.

I'm very interested in stuff like the Outline mode of Emacs.



> BTW: Does Rumacs sound good to you? :)

The name I have found for it is "Hybris".



matju

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