1. Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by "William Heimbigner" <icxcnika at hotpop.com> Sep 15, 2004
- 517 views
And here is an easy way to bring it: On download.com, there have been a total of 10 votes. 7 of them were thumbs up. 9 of them wrote reviews. A good programming language should have plenty of talk about it. I would encourage EVERYONE on this mailing list to submit a thumbs up/down on Euphoria, PREFERABLY write a good review. That would be awesome. People I would especially encourage to write reviews: Irv mullins Al Getz Tommy Carlier Unkmar Derek Parnell Pete Lomax Matt Lewis It's not that hard to write a review! You do have to sign up at download.com if you haven't already, and you also have to provide your email address, BUT THEY DO NOT SPAM YOU: I have been a member for years now and haven't gotten a single email I didn't want! William Heimbigner icxcnika at hotpop.com Visit the UBoard - Forceful Signups Removed! - http://uboard.proboards32.com - Threaded discussion, improved searching, human moderating, graphical smileys, better formatting abilities (now what else was there...) Visit my website: http://www.geocities.com/icxcnika123
2. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by Patrick Barnes <mrtrick at gmail.com> Sep 15, 2004
- 480 views
On Tue, 14 Sep 2004 17:55:22 -0500, William Heimbigner <icxcnika at hotpop.com> wrote: > It's not that hard to write a review! You do have to sign up at download.com > if you haven't already, and you also have to provide your email address, BUT > THEY DO NOT SPAM YOU: I have been a member for years now and haven't gotten > a single email I didn't want! Well, for that I would recommend mailinator... www.mailinator.com Don't give anyone your email address if you don't want them to email you. Simple as that. -- MrTrick
3. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by "Kat" <gertie at visionsix.com> Sep 15, 2004
- 495 views
On 14 Sep 2004, at 17:55, William Heimbigner wrote: > > > And here is an easy way to bring it: > On download.com, there have been a total of 10 votes. > 7 of them were thumbs up. > 9 of them wrote reviews. > A good programming language should have plenty of talk about it. > I would encourage EVERYONE on this mailing list to submit a thumbs up/down > on Euphoria, PREFERABLY write a good review. That would be awesome. > People I would especially encourage to write reviews: > > Irv mullins > Al Getz > Tommy Carlier > Unkmar > Derek Parnell > Pete Lomax > Matt Lewis That's probably going to result in a one-sided point of view. What about David Cuny, Jiri, Orkim, Robsz, and the rest of us? Kat
4. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by "William Heimbigner" <icxcnika at hotpop.com> Sep 15, 2004
- 490 views
----- Original Message ----- From: "Kat" <gertie at visionsix.com> To: <EUforum at topica.com> Sent: Wednesday, September 15, 2004 4:19 AM Subject: Re: Euphoria needs more popularity! > > > On 14 Sep 2004, at 17:55, William Heimbigner wrote: > > > > > And here is an easy way to bring it: > > On download.com, there have been a total of 10 votes. > > 7 of them were thumbs up. > > 9 of them wrote reviews. > > A good programming language should have plenty of talk about it. > > I would encourage EVERYONE on this mailing list to submit a thumbs up/down > > on Euphoria, PREFERABLY write a good review. That would be awesome. > > People I would especially encourage to write reviews: > > > > Irv mullins > > Al Getz > > Tommy Carlier > > Unkmar > > Derek Parnell > > Pete Lomax > > Matt Lewis > > That's probably going to result in a one-sided point of view. What about David > Cuny, Jiri, Orkim, Robsz, and the rest of us? > What can I say? I don't have time to mention everyone on the ML who posts more than 10 messages per month! > Kat > > > >
5. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by "Unkmar" <L3Euphoria at bellsouth.net> Sep 15, 2004
- 470 views
----- Original Message ----- From: "Kat" Sent: Wednesday, September 15, 2004 5:19 AM Subject: Re: Euphoria needs more popularity! > > On 14 Sep 2004, at 17:55, William Heimbigner wrote: > > > > And here is an easy way to bring it: > > On download.com, there have been a total of 10 votes. > > 7 of them were thumbs up. > > 9 of them wrote reviews. > > A good programming language should have plenty of talk about it. > > I would encourage EVERYONE on this mailing list to submit a thumbs up/down > > on Euphoria, PREFERABLY write a good review. That would be awesome. > > People I would especially encourage to write reviews: > > > > Irv mullins > > Al Getz > > Tommy Carlier > > Unkmar > > Derek Parnell > > Pete Lomax > > Matt Lewis > > That's probably going to result in a one-sided point of view. What about David > Cuny, Jiri, Orkim, Robsz, and the rest of us? > > Kat > Come on Kat, That's just the first names that came to his mind. And I'm not saying that just because my name was listed. I'm actually a bit shocked that I was mentioned. orkim isn't a high profile kind of guy, so I'm not exactly surprised that he didn't get listed. David Cuny is a bit of an old schooler. You don't see him around much any more. I'm not surprised that William being relatively new around here just didn't think of him. Same goes for Jiri. Pete Eberlein has been seen enough lately that he shouldn't have been forgotten. You not making the list is lopsided, but then again, I don't have as much praises to state about euphoria as I use to. No, The languange hasn't gotten worse. Yes, it has gotten better. But it definately hasn't kept up with my needs. It hasn't gotten anywhere close to keeping up. Lists are ridiculous. How about this newer list? Kat mic Irv mullins Al Getz Tommy Carlier Derek Parnell Pete Lomax Matt Lewis David Cuny Rob Sazaly Elliott Sales de Andrade Lucius L. Hilley III Juergen Luethje Igor Kachan CK Lester Travis Beaty Jason Mirwald Mario Steele Chris Bensler aku saya Patrick Barnes Tommy Carlier CoJaBo Matt Lewis Tone Skoda Hayden McKay Pete Lomax Andy Serpa Bernard Ryan Daniel Kluss Alexandear Toresson Dan Moyer Marc Giao Chris Burch rudy toews Christian Cuvier don cole Brian Broker Greg Haberek Craig Welch Guillermo Bonvehi sixs Jonas Temple Tom Reinhart Jordah Ferguson Travis Ferguson Judith Evans Terry Constant George Walters Rolf Schroder Andy Drummond Wolf Michelle Rogers Martin Stachon OtterDad Christopher Stone Rubens Monteiro Luciano R. Stowasser Prasanta Andrew Hall Mike Nelson John F Dutcher Unkmar
6. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by Evan Marshall <1evan at sbcglobal.net> Sep 15, 2004
- 485 views
I know I haven't been very vocal on the forum lately, but I still use Euphoria. Shouldn't my name be on the list too?
7. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by cklester <cklester at yahoo.com> Sep 15, 2004
- 485 views
Unkmar wrote: > How about this newer list? ... > CK Lester ... Wooo hooo! I made the list! Oh, the places I'll go now... :D -=ck "Programming in a state of EUPHORIA." http://www.cklester.com/euphoria/
8. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by Chris Burch <chriscrylex at aol.com> Sep 15, 2004
- 481 views
- Last edited Sep 16, 2004
cklester wrote: > > Unkmar wrote: > > > How about this newer list? > > ... > > CK Lester > ... > > Wooo hooo! I made the list! Oh, the places I'll go now... :D > > -=ck > "Programming in a state of EUPHORIA." > <a > href="http://www.cklester.com/euphoria/">http://www.cklester.com/euphoria/</a> > And whats really surprising, is so did I! Chris
9. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by Derek Parnell <ddparnell at bigpond.com> Sep 15, 2004
- 506 views
- Last edited Sep 16, 2004
Unkmar wrote: [snip] > > Kat > mic > Irv mullins > Al Getz > Tommy Carlier > Pete Lomax > Matt Lewis > David Cuny > Rob Sazaly > Elliott Sales de Andrade > Lucius L. Hilley III > Juergen Luethje > Igor Kachan > CK Lester > Travis Beaty > Jason Mirwald > Mario Steele > Chris Bensler > aku saya > Patrick Barnes > Tommy Carlier > CoJaBo > Matt Lewis > Tone Skoda > Hayden McKay > Pete Lomax > Andy Serpa > Bernard Ryan > Daniel Kluss > Alexandear Toresson > Dan Moyer > Marc Giao > Chris Burch > rudy toews > Christian Cuvier > don cole > Brian Broker > Greg Haberek > Craig Welch > Guillermo Bonvehi > sixs > Jonas Temple > Tom Reinhart > Jordah Ferguson > Travis Ferguson > Judith Evans > Terry Constant > George Walters > Rolf Schroder > Andy Drummond > Wolf > Michelle Rogers > Martin Stachon > OtterDad > Christopher Stone > Rubens Monteiro Luciano > R. Stowasser > Prasanta > Andrew Hall > Mike Nelson > John F Dutcher To paraphrase an ancient sage ... "I would not want to be in any club that would accept me as a member" - Grouch Marx -- Derek Parnell Melbourne, Australia
10. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by Pete Lomax <petelomax at blueyonder.co.uk> Sep 15, 2004
- 477 views
- Last edited Sep 16, 2004
On Wed, 15 Sep 2004 09:35:35 -0400, Lucius Hilley <l3euphoria at bellsouth.net> wrote: >How about this newer list? >Kat <snip> >Pete Lomax >Matt Lewis <snip> >Matt Lewis <snip> >Pete Lomax We mentioned twice? How nice ) Yet Kat appear, just once I fear ( SCNR
11. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by "Unkmar" <L3Euphoria at bellsouth.net> Sep 16, 2004
- 477 views
DerekP made my point better than I did by removing his name from the list. but, Only after I took the time of making a large list of names. And sure, I left out a few names. I only when through the past 2 months of emails. And I didn't pick every single name. I intentionally skipped some known newbies. and intentionally picked a few others. Those that appear to have learn some hard things rather quickly. My point is that any list of people that should cast a vote about Euphoria would be short sited and pointless. Granted, I am flattered that my name made the initial list. But I was easily able to think of many other more important folks than myself. Pete Eberlein, Jason Mirwald, and Elliott Sales de Andrade are few of those names. They have contributed in many ways that I can only aspire to do. I'm aware that my simple hilleyonline.com site is likely one of the main reasons I was listed. It is extremely old. But has apparently aged well. unkmar PS: Chris Bensler did votedat download.com, A long time ago.
12. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by <gwalias-bb at yahoo.com> Sep 16, 2004
- 482 views
--0-827612077-1095277103=:99259 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Dear Euphorians I agree with Kat that a balanced view of things would best serve the Euphoria community (although I have no idea whether the list of people in her email represents a balanced view or not - they are all people whose contributions to the EUforum I have enjoyed immensely since I joined the Euphoria community). I have found Euphoria to be a wonderful language to work with but I do feel that there is a downside to using it. I constantly oscillate back and forth between Python and Euphoria and was initially drawn to Euphoria by the promise of being able to speed up an application that ran like molasses when coded in Python. Now I don't want to compare apples and oranges and I certainly don't want to start a flame war about Python Vs. Euphoria - I use and love BOTH languages but for different reasons. Python shortcomings are mostly about its performance as an interpreted language, but things are improving all the time and there is now a significant body of know-how and a whole bunch of software tools to address this performance issue (Psyco, Pyrex, weave, Numeric Python etc. etc.). Euphoria still wins hands-down in this respect however and for that (amongst its many other charms - we love it!) To compare the Python community to the Euphoria community is in some sense grossly unfair given the difference in scale between the two, but every time I go back to use Python, I am astounded at the sheer array of pre-built libraries and Python tools that are available - not only their number, but the quality and maturity of them. The GUI interfaces are incredibly well thought out, robust and very mature. wxPython or PyGTK offer practically unlimited scope for building graphical applications that look and feel utterly professional. They have also contributed to the superb roster of Python development tools such as code-aware editors and IDEs. As a further example, if you find yourself writing a lot of mathematical code (as I do), there is hardly any corner of modern mathematics for which there isn't already a comprehensive Python library or toolkit. The modularity of Python with its packages, modules and namespaces (and the wonderful 'distutils') makes all this stuff work together very easily indeed - and without having to reinvent the wheel each time, one can quickly create superb and robust Python applications. The ability to build the Python interpreter directly into the app as a scripting language should not be overlooked either. I really feel that if Euphoria is going to grow significantly as a programming language, it could do a lot worse than emulate some of the successes of the Python community. The issue of modules and namespaces has been batted around for some time in the EUforum and would seem to be a step in the right direction. The OOPS thing is probably a non-issue since it already exists as an option for Euphoria developers (if they want it) and the purists always drone on about Python not being 'pure' OOPS anyway. But the kind of 'modular re-usable-lego-building-blocks' paradigm that pervades Python definitely makes it easier to share code in a big community. As the person who started this thread so rightly observed, Euphoria needs to be more popular and widespread in order for there to be the demand to create (and share) all these fabulous tools. In a sense, it really is very unfair of me to compare the resources of the Python community to those of the much (much) smaller Euphoria community - but just because that's how it is now doesn't have to mean that we couldn't aspire to something similar for Euphoria. I guess the big question is: 'What would it take for Euphoria to become as popular as Python?" Should an Open Source version of Euphoria be considered? - something that could be developed by a community of users with changes being included in the "official" releases based upon the decisons of a sub-community of steering users (RDS could continue to sell tools like the shrouder and the C translator). BTW: I have no right to tell RDS what they should do with their property nor am I saying that this is what should be done (it may be dreadful idea!) - I am just trying to stimulate a discussion about how Euphoria and its user community might develop in the future. These are just my humble opinions - please don't flame me becuase you think I'm being hard on Euphoria, I'm really not - I think Euphoria is fantastic and the small community of Euphoria users never ceases to impress me with with its creativity, energy and sheer resourcefulness. I just happen to think that we can learn a lot from the success of Python. Best Gordon Kat <gertie at visionsix.com> wrote: On 14 Sep 2004, at 17:55, William Heimbigner wrote: > > > And here is an easy way to bring it: > On download.com, there have been a total of 10 votes. > 7 of them were thumbs up. > 9 of them wrote reviews. > A good programming language should have plenty of talk about it. > I would encourage EVERYONE on this mailing list to submit a thumbs up/down > on Euphoria, PREFERABLY write a good review. That would be awesome. > People I would especially encourage to write reviews: > > Irv mullins > Al Getz > Tommy Carlier > Unkmar > Derek Parnell > Pete Lomax > Matt Lewis That's probably going to result in a one-sided point of view. What about David Cuny, Jiri, Orkim, Robsz, and the rest of us? Kat
13. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by "Kat" <gertie at visionsix.com> Sep 16, 2004
- 483 views
On 15 Sep 2004, at 9:35, Lucius Hilley wrote: <snip> > You not making the list is lopsided, but then again, I don't > have > as much praises to state about euphoria as I use to. No, The languange > hasn't gotten worse. Yes, it has gotten better. But it definately hasn't > kept > up with my needs. It hasn't gotten anywhere close to keeping up. <snip> One hasto only look at PHP, PERL, C, or each new Basic that pops up each day to see Euphoria is dragging tail in the mud. There are some mighty useful features of Eu that i use in every program, and there are some very frustrating drawbacks (and i do mean the occasional day i spend concentrating on the syntax of Eu instead of the goal of the program, to get around the lack of features which are present in other "LISPy" languages (lua, prolog,scheme, etc)). It's sad some good programmers went to find greener pastures. Kat
14. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by irv mullins <irvm at ellijay.com> Sep 16, 2004
- 480 views
Kat wrote: > One hasto only look at PHP, PERL, C, or each new Basic that pops up each > day to see Euphoria is dragging tail in the mud. There are some mighty > useful features of Eu that i use in every program, and there are some very > frustrating drawbacks (and i do mean the occasional day i spend > concentrating on the syntax of Eu instead of the goal of the program, to get > around the lack of features which are present in other "LISPy" languages > (lua, prolog,scheme, etc)). It's sad some good programmers went to find > greener pastures. Make that 'many' good programmers. The problem is not that Euphoria lacks these features, the problem is that there are only two chances that useful features will ever be added: slim, and none. That's what is so discouraging. I see no reason whatsoever why Rob should not just freeze Euphoria at 2.4 (or 2.5), and then devote his time to implementing things which his customers have been asking for. Experiment a little, for cryin' out loud! You're allowed more than one good idea per lifetime, you know. Irv
15. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by Derek Parnell <ddparnell at bigpond.com> Sep 16, 2004
- 501 views
Version 2.0 Official Release March 25, 1998 + 12 months Version 2.1 Official Release for WIN32 + DOS32 March 29, 1999 + 10 months Version 2.2 Official Release for WIN32+DOS32 January 14, 2000 + 25 months Version 2.3 Official Release February 11, 2002 + 18 months Version 2.4 Official Release July 3, 2003 + 18 months? Version 2.5 ?December, 2004? That's right, we have moved from v2.0 to v2.5 in 6.5 years. Not Fast. RDS is slow to release anything, and they keep declining offers of help. Could this be another reason for people being discouraged? Yes, I know there is a shitload of work to get out a new release, but there is also many able people to help, if only you'd let them. I would prefer a major release every 6 months with weekly minor (patch) releases, instead of this cold molasses. Perfection is not so nearly as important as improvement. Having a perfect product that doesn't meet my needs is not much use. Having a nearly perfect product that I can still use is a much better prospect. Robert, Are you using beta testers? Has anyone impartially inspected or reviewed your code? Do you have a formal(-ish) issue log that you are working through? Do you need more man-hours in the day to work on Euphoria? Sorry to sound so frustrated, but I am. I love Euphoria and I continue to champion it, but I also begin to tire. -- Derek Parnell Melbourne, Australia
16. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by cklester <cklester at yahoo.com> Sep 16, 2004
- 505 views
Derek Parnell wrote: > ...we have moved from v2.0 to v2.5 in 6.5 years. Interesting and insightful... > I would prefer a major release every 6 months with weekly minor (patch) > releases, instead of this cold molasses. Perfection is not so nearly > as important as improvement. Having a perfect product that doesn't meet > my needs is not much use. Having a nearly perfect product that I can still > use is a much better prospect. I agree. Well-deserved props to Rob, but let's get on with it! There's nothing to lose... is there? -=ck "Programming in a state of EUPHORIA." http://www.cklester.com/euphoria/
17. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by Matt Lewis <matthewwalkerlewis at yahoo.com> Sep 16, 2004
- 510 views
Derek Parnell wrote: > I would prefer a major release every 6 months with weekly minor (patch) > releases, instead of this cold molasses. Perfection is not so nearly > as important as improvement. Having a perfect product that doesn't meet > my needs is not much use. Having a nearly perfect product that I can still > use is a much better prospect. I agree. I'd be perfectly willing to cough up the registration fees on a shorter schedule for a more constantly improving Euphoria. Matt Lewis
18. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by irv mullins <irvm at ellijay.com> Sep 16, 2004
- 485 views
Derek Parnell wrote: > RDS is slow to release anything, and they keep declining offers of help. > Could this be another reason for people being discouraged? > > Yes, I know there is a shitload of work to get out a new release, but > there is also many able people to help, if only you'd let them. > > I would prefer a major release every 6 months with weekly minor (patch) > releases, instead of this cold molasses. Perfection is not so nearly > as important as improvement. Having a perfect product that doesn't meet > my needs is not much use. Having a nearly perfect product that I can still > use is a much better prospect. As far as I can see, there is no technical reason for Rob not to release alpha or beta versions for people to test. He's got that warning routine in there. Why not simply print a warning that "function foo() is experimental - do not use for production work", until foo() has either been verified to work properly, fixed, or dropped. That would eliminate any possible complaints about Euphoria being "unstable". People actually do want to help, but as it stands, the only way they can contribute to Euphoria itself is to add to the "wish lists". If wishes were fishes.... Irv
19. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by Evan Marshall <1evan at sbcglobal.net> Sep 16, 2004
- 483 views
irv mullins wrote: >>.... > If wishes were fishes.... > > Irv > I'd be stuffed and would weigh 600lbs!
20. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by Jonas Temple <jtemple at yhti.net> Sep 16, 2004
- 481 views
Derek Parnell wrote: > RDS is slow to release anything, and they keep declining offers of help. > Could this be another reason for people being discouraged? > I would prefer a major release every 6 months with weekly minor (patch) > releases, instead of this cold molasses. Perfection is not so nearly > as important as improvement. Having a perfect product that doesn't meet > my needs is not much use. Having a nearly perfect product that I can still > use is a much better prospect. > > Robert, > Are you using beta testers? > Has anyone impartially inspected or reviewed your code? > Do you have a formal(-ish) issue log that you are working through? > Do you need more man-hours in the day to work on Euphoria? > > Sorry to sound so frustrated, but I am. I love Euphoria and I continue > to champion it, but I also begin to tire. > Besides the frequency of releases, anyone else ever notice how silent RDS is on the subject when this is brought up? I'm guessing Rob doesn't get involved in these discussions because whatever his reasoning is for frequency/features of new releases someone won't like it. Rob, I know you're reading this... Like Derek, I too love the language and will continue to use Euphoria. That being said, there are several features that I would like to see in the language but have little hope that they will ever exist... threads ... ability to create a .dll/.so without translating/compiling ... better exception handling (though this might improve with the next release). But hey, let's face it. NO language is ever without it's "wish list". Jonas
21. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by Robert Craig <rds at RapidEuphoria.com> Sep 16, 2004
- 473 views
Derek Parnell wrote: > Version 2.0 Official Release March 25, 1998 > + 12 months > Version 2.1 Official Release for WIN32 + DOS32 March 29, 1999 > + 10 months > Version 2.2 Official Release for WIN32+DOS32 January 14, 2000 > + 25 months During that time I spent a year designing, developing and porting the Euphoria to C Translator to 4 platforms and 7 different C compilers. I should have merged that information into the release notes. > Version 2.3 Official Release February 11, 2002 > + 18 months > Version 2.4 Official Release July 3, 2003 > + 18 months? > Version 2.5 ?December, 2004? > That's right, we have moved from v2.0 to v2.5 in 6.5 years. Not Fast. Maybe I should call the next one 3.0. Will that help? Isn't Win32Lib officially still an "alpha" release, 0.60.5, after those same 6.5 years? > RDS is slow to release anything, and they keep declining offers of help. > Could this be another reason for people being discouraged? > > Yes, I know there is a shitload of work to get out a new release, but > there is also many able people to help, if only you'd let them. Yeah, I heard you can produce a baby in 1 month by assigning 9 women to the job. > I would prefer a major release every 6 months with weekly minor (patch) > releases, instead of this cold molasses. That's what I keep telling myself. It just never works out that way. There's just a lot of overhead in getting a new release out, plus when do I charge for an upgrade? I'll give it some thought. > Perfection is not so nearly > as important as improvement. Having a perfect product that doesn't meet > my needs is not much use. Having a nearly perfect product that I can still > use is a much better prospect. > > Robert, > Are you using beta testers? Every official release comes after an alpha and a beta release. Earlier releases would waste my time on handling a lot of bug reports and questions. I have tons of existing Euphoria code I can use as testing fodder. > Has anyone impartially inspected or reviewed your code? Not besides Junko, but very soon the entire world will be able to inspect the front-end of Euphoria, and everyone will own a complete Euphoria interpreter with 100% Euphoria source code, able to run all Euphoria programs on all platforms. > Do you have a formal(-ish) issue log that you are working through? Yes. > Do you need more man-hours in the day to work on Euphoria? Of course. > Sorry to sound so frustrated, but I am. I love Euphoria and I continue > to champion it, but I also begin to tire. I thank you for your patience, and your tremendous efforts on Win32Lib. Euphoria would be in deep trouble without you. I'd like to speed up my progress too. I have been slacking off a bit, but you have to give me credit for sticking with this project for 15 years (since initial design - 1.0 was released 11 years ago). But I would certainly turn it over to the masses if I couldn't or didn't want to continue. Regards, Rob Craig Rapid Deployment Software http://www.RapidEuphoria.com
22. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by Jonas Temple <jtemple at yhti.net> Sep 16, 2004
- 497 views
Robert Craig wrote: > > During that time I spent a year designing, developing and porting the > Euphoria to C Translator to 4 platforms and 7 different C compilers. > I should have merged that information into the release notes. > Well, I guess I have to retract my earlier statement...RDS does get involved in these discussions! > > I would prefer a major release every 6 months with weekly minor (patch) > > releases, instead of this cold molasses. > > That's what I keep telling myself. > It just never works out that way. > There's just a lot of overhead in getting > a new release out, plus when do I charge for an upgrade? When to charge for upgrade? WHENEVER YOU WANT!!!!!!!!!!! It's your product! Obviously if you charge for every little change then you'll hack some people off. I would even be open to a "maintenance" based system where we could pay a fixed $ every year for the priveledge of getting the upgrades whenever they come out. OR...go to a V.R.M system and charge whenever the R changes? That would be very similar to what you're doing now and if you change the R every year you'd be getting about the same result. > > Has anyone impartially inspected or reviewed your code? > > Not besides Junko, but very soon the entire world will > be able to inspect the front-end of Euphoria, and everyone will > own a complete Euphoria interpreter with 100% Euphoria source code, > able to run all Euphoria programs on all platforms. Rob, from my perspective I have very little interest in the front-end of the interpreter or having a 100% Euphoria-based interpreter. What I need is a stable product that solves the problem at hand. My guess would be that I'm not alone on this... Jonas
23. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by Bernard Ryan <xotron at bluefrog.com> Sep 16, 2004
- 480 views
Rob, I would just like some HOOKS so that it would be easier to inteface Euphoria code to other langauges like ASM, CPP then Euphoria would be more extendable. Bernie My files in archive: http://www.rapideuphoria.com/w32engin.zip http://www.rapideuphoria.com/mixedlib.zip http://www.rapideuphoria.com/eu_engin.zip http://www.rapideuphoria.com/win32eru.zip
24. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by Matt Lewis <matthewwalkerlewis at yahoo.com> Sep 16, 2004
- 467 views
Bernard Ryan wrote: > > > Rob, I would just like some HOOKS so that it would be > easier to inteface Euphoria code to other langauges > like ASM, CPP then Euphoria would be more extendable. > What sort of hooks are you suggesting? With the cdecl convention and the ability to call function pointers through c_func/proc, we can do this now. The only exception I can think of off the top of my head is that we can only have up to 9 parameters in a callback. Matt Lewis
25. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by "Kat" <gertie at visionsix.com> Sep 16, 2004
- 483 views
On 16 Sep 2004, at 10:59, Jonas Temple wrote: > Rob, from my perspective I have very little interest in the front-end > of the interpreter or having a 100% Euphoria-based interpreter. What I > need is a stable product that solves the problem at hand. My guess would > be that I'm not alone on this... I am very interested, mostly because splitting the execution unit from the compiler and interpreter leads to all the features everyone has asked for, including goto, string execution, pointers, Bernie's "hooks", case tables, conditional type checking necessary for record types, importing C code, calling other languages, etc.. It's probably to RDS's detriment that these added features won't be part of Eu's core,,, partly for the value added to Eu's income, and partly because it's likely differently enabled user versions won't play nicely together. Kat
26. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by Bernard Ryan <xotron at bluefrog.com> Sep 16, 2004
- 477 views
- Last edited Sep 17, 2004
Matt Lewis wrote: > What sort of hooks are you suggesting? With the cdecl convention and > the ability to call function pointers through c_func/proc, we can do > this now. The only exception I can think of off the top of my head > is that we can only have up to 9 parameters in a callback. > Matt: I would like someway to deal with setjump() Automatic ways of dealing with this pointers. Or someway through an interface to call CPP code directly from Euphoria easily without having to translate to "C". Bernie My files in archive: http://www.rapideuphoria.com/w32engin.zip http://www.rapideuphoria.com/mixedlib.zip http://www.rapideuphoria.com/eu_engin.zip http://www.rapideuphoria.com/win32eru.zip
27. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by Derek Parnell <ddparnell at bigpond.com> Sep 16, 2004
- 488 views
- Last edited Sep 17, 2004
Robert Craig wrote: > > Derek Parnell wrote: > > Version 2.0 Official Release March 25, 1998 > > + 12 months > > Version 2.1 Official Release for WIN32 + DOS32 March 29, 1999 > > + 10 months > > Version 2.2 Official Release for WIN32+DOS32 January 14, 2000 > > + 25 months > > During that time I spent a year designing, developing and porting the > Euphoria to C Translator to 4 platforms and 7 different C compilers. > I should have merged that information into the release notes. Like I said, a shitload of work. Too much for a one-man team, I'd argue. > > Version 2.3 Official Release February 11, 2002 > > + 18 months > > Version 2.4 Official Release July 3, 2003 > > + 18 months? > > Version 2.5 ?December, 2004? > > That's right, we have moved from v2.0 to v2.5 in 6.5 years. Not Fast. > > Maybe I should call the next one 3.0. Will that help? Not one bit. > Isn't Win32Lib officially still an "alpha" release, 0.60.5, > after those same 6.5 years? And I took in on around v0.50. How many releases does that mean? A least 15 in the same time as your 5. The literal version number is not important. The number of releases is a more telling statistic. > > RDS is slow to release anything, and they keep declining offers of help. > > Could this be another reason for people being discouraged? > > > > Yes, I know there is a shitload of work to get out a new release, but > > there is also many able people to help, if only you'd let them. > > Yeah, I heard you can produce a baby in 1 month by > assigning 9 women to the job. I know you are not serious about that statement, but that might be a problem too. It seems that you are saying that your work can never be helped by using multiple people. Prove it! > > I would prefer a major release every 6 months with weekly minor (patch) > > releases, instead of this cold molasses. > > That's what I keep telling myself. > It just never works out that way. How we we know - we've not seen you try it. > There's just a lot of overhead in getting > a new release out, Sure is! You could do with a hand. >plus when do I charge for an upgrade? Whenever you wanted to. > I'll give it some thought. Yeah, you do that. So version 2.6 is scheduled for when ... February 2006? > > Perfection is not so nearly > > as important as improvement. Having a perfect product that doesn't meet > > my needs is not much use. Having a nearly perfect product that I can still > > use is a much better prospect. What? No comment? This seems to be the area of greatest consensus. > > Robert, > > Are you using beta testers? > > Every official release comes after an alpha and a beta > release. Earlier releases would waste my time on > handling a lot of bug reports and questions. Heaven forbid! We wouldn't want to find all those bugs so early would we? Again, if this is a lot of work, then maybe you could do with help? > I have tons of existing Euphoria code I can use as testing fodder. I should hope so. This is great for regression testing, but what about planned test cases, a test plan, a formal Euphoria test suite? > > Has anyone impartially inspected or reviewed your code? > > Not besides Junko, Then you are doing yourself a disservice. Inspection/Reviewing is the most cost effective method of finding bugs. It finds more than testing and finds them earlier. >but very soon the entire world will > be able to inspect the front-end of Euphoria, and everyone will > own a complete Euphoria interpreter with 100% Euphoria source code, > able to run all Euphoria programs on all platforms. So you intended to have the work reviewed after it is released. Not worlds best practice, I can assure you. > > Do you have a formal(-ish) issue log that you are working through? > > Yes. Great! Well done. > > Do you need more man-hours in the day to work on Euphoria? > > Of course. So get more people to give you those man-hours! I'd pay you to be on your team. > > Sorry to sound so frustrated, but I am. I love Euphoria and I continue > > to champion it, but I also begin to tire. > > I thank you for your patience, and your tremendous > efforts on Win32Lib. Euphoria would be in deep trouble without you. Bullshit. Its a great product that could be well by itself, but has been left behind by the competition. > I'd like to speed up my progress too. I have been slacking > off a bit, but you have to give me credit for sticking with > this project for 15 years (since initial design - 1.0 was > released 11 years ago). I respect your committment and your efforts. You had created a revolutionary product that deserved more air time. RDS's development methodology is the major reason for Euphoria's lack of success - not the product itself. > But I would certainly turn it over to > the masses if I couldn't or didn't want to continue. How about loosening the apron-strings a bit earlier than that? Your baby needs to grow up. -- Derek Parnell Melbourne, Australia
28. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by Terry Constant <EUforum at terryconstant.com> Sep 16, 2004
- 496 views
- Last edited Sep 17, 2004
Rob, You have done well. In summer 1998 I stopped using EUphoria when I began developing for a company who provided a very popular scripting language in the Win32 world. This year the company was bought by a larger company on the west coast and I ceased developing for them. I decided to come back to Euphoria, which I had always liked. I was pleasantly surprised how well all of my old routines continued to work after such a long time. WELL DONE!. Though I truly liked the scripting language that we (at the company mentioned above) developed. In every release 3.2, 3.3, 3.4, 4.0, 4.1, 4.2, 4.3, and 4.4, we broke some portions of previous scripts. The improvements we made were nice, but every release was a bit of a hassle for us and some customers. Scripts written (except for the most simple and basic) in 1998, simply would not run in our releases in 2003-2004. The fact that many of my old Euphoria scripts do run is a kudo for RDS. I began programming in 1967. I have HAD to make thousands of changes in programs and scripts over the years because of changes/improvements in languages. Though I understand the perspectives of several people who have responded, I do want to say that NOT having to change programs/scripts with every release is a blessing that I appreciate. (Doesn't mean there aren't some things I would like to have in the language. Just saying that there is a blessing in slow stability that we should not forget.) One responder (I forget who) indicated that he/she was not so much interested in fiddling with the interpreter source code as much as working with a good language. I am in that boat. I don't want to work in C. I want to work in Euphoria. So, to me, Euphoria being stable and robust is important. For practical reasons, I have finally started working almost exclusively with MS OSes (not because I like them or MS). In the current scripting world of MS, I would like to see very robust and RDS provided OLE/ActiveX/COM abilities/routines. If I had this one official addition in Euphoria, then my abilities and communication with other tools would be enhanced. (I would like to see Euphoria in WSH, but I don't see a realistic way for you to do it.) Also, I want to program/script in Euphoria. For me, source code for an interpreter is of little interest. I am tired of programming in C. I want to work in Euphoria. I want Euphoria, the end product for me to use to be robust. Just my two cents in this current thread. Terry Constant
29. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by "Kat" <gertie at visionsix.com> Sep 16, 2004
- 494 views
- Last edited Sep 17, 2004
I second all that Derek said below: On 16 Sep 2004, at 15:03, Derek Parnell wrote: > > > posted by: Derek Parnell <ddparnell at bigpond.com> > > Robert Craig wrote: > > > > Derek Parnell wrote: > > > Version 2.0 Official Release March 25, 1998 > > > + 12 months > > > Version 2.1 Official Release for WIN32 + DOS32 March 29, 1999 > > > + 10 months > > > Version 2.2 Official Release for WIN32+DOS32 January 14, 2000 > > > + 25 months > > > > During that time I spent a year designing, developing and porting the > > Euphoria to C Translator to 4 platforms and 7 different C compilers. > > I should have merged that information into the release notes. > > > Like I said, a shitload of work. Too much for a one-man team, I'd argue. > > > > Version 2.3 Official Release February 11, 2002 > > > + 18 months > > > Version 2.4 Official Release July 3, 2003 > > > + 18 months? > > > Version 2.5 ?December, 2004? > > > That's right, we have moved from v2.0 to v2.5 in 6.5 years. Not Fast. > > > > Maybe I should call the next one 3.0. Will that help? > > Not one bit. > > > Isn't Win32Lib officially still an "alpha" release, 0.60.5, > > after those same 6.5 years? > > > And I took in on around v0.50. How many releases does that mean? A least > 15 in the same time as your 5. The literal version number is not important. > The > number of releases is a more telling statistic. > > > > RDS is slow to release anything, and they keep declining offers of help. > > > Could this be another reason for people being discouraged? > > > > > > Yes, I know there is a shitload of work to get out a new release, but > > > there is also many able people to help, if only you'd let them. > > > > Yeah, I heard you can produce a baby in 1 month by > > assigning 9 women to the job. > > I know you are not serious about that statement, but that might be > a problem too. It seems that you are saying that your work can never > be helped by using multiple people. Prove it! > > > > > I would prefer a major release every 6 months with weekly minor (patch) > > > releases, instead of this cold molasses. > > > > That's what I keep telling myself. > > It just never works out that way. > > How we we know - we've not seen you try it. > > > There's just a lot of overhead in getting > > a new release out, > > Sure is! You could do with a hand. > > >plus when do I charge for an upgrade? > > Whenever you wanted to. > > > I'll give it some thought. > > Yeah, you do that. So version 2.6 is scheduled for when ... February 2006? > > > > Perfection is not so nearly > > > as important as improvement. Having a perfect product that doesn't meet my > > > needs is not much use. Having a nearly perfect product that I can still > > > use > > > is a much better prospect. > > What? No comment? This seems to be the area of greatest consensus. > > > > Robert, > > > Are you using beta testers? > > > > Every official release comes after an alpha and a beta > > release. Earlier releases would waste my time on > > handling a lot of bug reports and questions. > > Heaven forbid! We wouldn't want to find all those bugs so early would we? > Again, if this is a lot of work, then maybe you could do with help? > > > I have tons of existing Euphoria code I can use as testing fodder. > > I should hope so. This is great for regression testing, but what about > planned test cases, a test plan, a formal Euphoria test suite? > > > > Has anyone impartially inspected or reviewed your code? > > > > Not besides Junko, > <snip> > > >
30. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by Robert Craig <rds at RapidEuphoria.com> Sep 17, 2004
- 487 views
Terry Constant wrote: > One responder (I forget who) indicated that he/she was not so > much interested in fiddling with the interpreter source code > as much as working with a good language. I am in that boat. I > don't want to work in C. I want to work in Euphoria. So, to > me, Euphoria being stable and robust is important. The interpreter source code that I'm releasing is 100% Euphoria. No C. I assume that most people will not be interested in working on the interpreter source, but a few will. Some positive things I'm hoping to achieve with this are: - hundreds of people reading the source, finding bugs and/or suggesting improvements. Since I'm using the same Euphoria-coded front end in the official interpreter (not to mention the translator and the binder), I can copy useful changes directly into my code. - a greater degree of confidence that Euphoria can be continued with or without RDS - people can develop support tools such as: - an interpreter with a fancy Windows GUI debugger - source code analysis tools, such as symbol table dump, stricter semantic checks, statistics - lots of other things I can't even imagine - open source "believers" will have to admit that Euphoria is (in a sense) open source - anyone can add or modify a front-end or back-end feature. In some cases I will incorporate that feature in my version, once people have played with it and refined it for a while. - the level of understanding of Euphoria, and the interest in Euphoria from an educational point of view might increase. Many, if not most, Euphoria users are hobbyists who are as interested in learning how a tool works, as in actually using the tool. This could spawn a few competitors, but I think as long as I keep improving the RDS version, competitors will have a hard time grabbing market share. My official version, with a C-coded back-end, will be faster. You can easily translate the 100% Euphoria version to C to get a pretty fast .exe, but it's still significantly slower than my carefully hand-coded C back-end. Regards, Rob Craig Rapid Deployment Software http://www.RapidEuphoria.com
31. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by Craig Welch <euphoria at welchaviation.org> Sep 17, 2004
- 517 views
Robert Craig wrote: > - the level of understanding of Euphoria, and the interest in > Euphoria from an educational point of view might increase. > Many, if not most, Euphoria users are hobbyists who are > as interested in learning how a tool works, as in actually > using the tool. Rob, I'm a hobbyist ... in that I don't program for a living. I looked for a language to help me write some specific applications for myself (to do with learning Japanese). I settled on Euphoria, and I'm glad that I did. I'm happy with it, although it has been a steep learning curve. Having said that, I must say that I have *zero* interest in how the tool works. I just want it to do the job as advertized. Hope this sample of one helps ... Regards, -- Craig
32. Re: Euphoria needs more popularity!
- Posted by Ron Weidner <nova812 at hotmail.com> Sep 20, 2004
- 479 views
> ... everyone will own a complete Euphoria interpreter with 100% > Euphoria source code, able to run all Euphoria programs on all > platforms. > This is very exciting for me and I hope to see this soon.