1. New User
- Posted by David Fulton <dave.fulton at USA.NET> Dec 15, 1997
- 772 views
Hi, just thought I'd make a squeek on this page to let people know I'm here. I only discovered Euphoria two days ago and it takes some getting use to to realise how elegant this language is. I've spent allready over 20 hours exploring the language and looking at the code many users have contributed and am really impressed. First a little background, I'm an asm programmer mainly writing drivers for hardware devices and even wrote a complete version of GSX for an Elan many years ago just for fun. Now I would like to develope my own os (32bit). I have allready developed my own crude os based loosly on Myrtle but with vastly superior disk handling and filing systems. What I would like to know is has anyone thought of implementing Euphoria into an operating system perhaps by converting ex.exe or exw.exe into dll's or tsr's. By useing the runtime module and reusable code fragments a complete gui should be quite efficiently implemented with simpler api's and screen handling than Win95 etc. I am fed up with all the different languages we have to learn to keep up with the likes of Microsoft and would like to develope a simple os to develope a web server that is both easy to maintain and easy to code for.Remember good old unix compiles for the components within it and I would envisiage the same for my ideal os. If anyone has any thoughts about this or any knowledge of what has allready been achieved and implemented please let me know . Thank You...... Dave Fulton (New User) email ......... dave.fulton at usa.net
2. New User
- Posted by Mike Wagman <michael.wagman at JADEBBS.COM> Jan 23, 1997
- 733 views
Hello, I've just started with Euphoria - I've been programming as a hobbyist on varios computer for 14 years (and wrote my first interpreter 13 years ago - no kidding). I wondered if anyone had some how to get a feel for the language advice. Before a year ago I was an amiga owner but when it died I decided to get something that was still being produced. I really like what I see - I'm not tied down with machine specifics and how variables are handled is great. Thanks Mike
3. New User
- Posted by Ad Rienks <106075.266 at COMPUSERVE.COM> Jan 23, 1997
- 697 views
Hi Mike: >I wondered if anyone had some how to get a feel for the language advice. I found out a lot about the features of Euphoria by studying the ed.ex file. Try to understand and possibly rewrite a piece of the code, and study it line by line. Open a second window with a helpfile. These are some suggestions to an interested newcomer. Good Luck! Ad Rienks.
4. Re: New User
- Posted by Marcel Kollenaar <M.Kollenaar at SLO.NL> Jan 24, 1997
- 714 views
Hello Mike Welcome in the world of Euphoria! > kidding). I wondered if anyone had some how to get a feel for the > language advice. I started to study the examples and started with the getword(), getdword() functions and build up the knowledge step by step. Just start with small chunks of separated code. So you can trace what you are doing. And allways study code from others you can learn a lot of it. In the beginning the sequences were very difficult for me but after the 'Aha' experience you can dream them. Marcel
5. New User
- Posted by Or Tamir <o_tamir at NETVISION.NET.IL> Jan 04, 1997
- 714 views
- Last edited Jan 05, 1997
Hi Everyone, I'm new to euphoria and I've been monitoring your messages, trying your programs, and going your web sites for quite a while now. I got all the tools to begin with euphoria but teaching yourself takes a lot of time I don't have!!! I was wondering if you can give me something cool to program (yet simple) that will get me hooked on euphoria. BTW, I think it will be way cool if you decided to go through with this group programing of a game. personally, on the programs I ran and experiments I made, I don't think euphoria can handle a 3-D graphic mode and run all the routines and sub-routines without turning your computer into a 286, but you can go for a nice 2-D from the cool kind (Mortal Kombat and Co.) Personally, I'm more into web pages and programing. BTW I think Euphoria will be perfect for creating windows applications and accesories on it (Notepad, Modem Utils, Anti-Virus, etc...) I think that another thing that would use up every bit of Euphoria can be a screen saver for windows 95. big potential there. Seeya around. The Master P.S. Izchak, I'd love to get a copy of your text editor when you finish it.
6. New User
- Posted by Joseph Martin <jam at EXIS.NET> Jan 25, 1997
- 703 views
Hello, I am a 13 year old who is nuts about programming and computers. I found Euphoria almost by accident, but like the program already. Are there any "Windows" versions of Euphoria planned? Also is ex.exe portable to Unix? Thanks for the attention. ****************************** Joseph Martin joe at cyber-wizard.com ******************************
7. New User
- Posted by Peter Willems <peter at integratedmoves.com> Jun 24, 2003
- 685 views
Hi everyone, Just like to introduce myself to the list. I stumbled upon Euphoria just yesterday while searching the web for a scripting language to do some task automation around our website maintenance. I have my own software company where we develop windows software using a tool called WinDev. Although I can do anything and everything with that language, it's a bit of a chore for smaller tasks because of it's high-level project profile (so it takes quite some time to just set up a project). The great thing is that the Euphoria language is very, VERY close to the WinDev language, so I won't have any problems using it. I'll be using Euphoria over the next few weeks to do some task automation and I'm already sure that I will register Euphoria within that timeframe. I'm looking forward to discussing stuff with you guys Hans Peter Willems
8. Re: New User
- Posted by Derek Parnell <ddparnell at bigpond.com> Jun 25, 2003
- 693 views
----- Original Message ----- From: "Peter Willems" <peter at integratedmoves.com> To: "EUforum" <EUforum at topica.com> Subject: RE: New User Hi Peter, I'd like to add my welcome too. I suspect you'll find the Euphoria community here to be a "weird mob" (Australian term meaning 'hard to understand sometimes but worth the effort of trying'). > > Yep, I already found a great pile of usefull stuff, including > Judith's IDE. I'm really looking forward to start using Euphoria > and maybe I can write some libraries for the community too (I saw > someone asking somewhere for a string manipulation lib...) > A string manipulation library is a great idea. It can help you learn lots about Euphoria's capabilites fairly quickly. In fact, this type of library is almost a rite of passage for new Eu coders. Please don't hestate to ask questions or look at similar attempts from the RDS Archives. -- Derek
9. Re: New User
- Posted by Ray Tomes <rtomes at ihug.co.nz> Jun 25, 2003
- 684 views
Derek Parnell wrote: > A string manipulation library is a great idea. It can help you learn lots > about Euphoria's capabilites fairly quickly. In fact, this type of library > is almost a rite of passage for new Eu coders. Please don't hestate to ask > questions or look at similar attempts from the RDS Archives. Yes, welcome Peter. I am rather new here too. I had just commented before you arrived how easy it is to manipulate strings in Euphoria, even easier than in BASIC. Someone pointed me at the find command as their "friend", and indeed it is. An example. I am writing a system that has prototype letters with tags of the form <XXX> (where XXX is three letters) that represent various things like names, addresses, dates etc and that must be replaced by some text that has the particular value of that variable for the particular person that the letter is being sent to. To make matters more complicated, I don't even know what the full list of tags is (and don't want to thank you very much as there are about a hundred of them and they get extended) but my person file has matched pairs of tag and value. So I read in a person's data and store in a couple of sequences as "tag" and "value" (where value[1] goes with tag[1] etc.). So I don't have any variable names such as "name", "address" and so on as the variable names are all stored in "tag" and the values of the variables in "value" in the matching position. This makes my program much smaller and it works when new variables are added without any changes being made. One function that I obviously want is to get into "thisvalue" the matching value of a tag whose value I have in "thistag" so all I need to code is: thisvalue=value[find(thistag,tag)] No loops, no searching. I suppose I should have an error test for not found. Next I want to take my letter and replace all tags by their values. Hey, I do need a string function for this and I don't see it anywhere as yet. It is a simple replace command something like: resultstring=replace(findstring,replacestring,originalstring) well, let me see if I can write this here and now without any testing... function replace (structure findstring, structure replacestring, structure originalstring) atom ix ix=find (findstring, originalstring) return originalstring[1..ix-1] & replacestring & originalstring[ix+length(findstring)..length(originalstring)] end function again I haven't done any check to see if it exists. But you can see how string functions in Euphoria almost write themselves - particularly when you know how useful find is. Another string function that I want is for the same program. I want to output some text in a text box with automatic wrap at a point NOT the same as the width of the text field and then put some more text to begin at the point where the wrapping was occurring and also to wrap but now using the full window. e.g. the result might look like this: (my text box is this big) ---------------------------------------------V (my wrap point is initially set here)-----------------V Did you ever live in another country? If so, please tell about that experience. No. ~ Did you ever travel overseas to countries that speak different languages than your native language? If so, please tell about your experience. Yes. I went to Europe and visited England, France, Italy and Germany with very brief stops in Switzerland and Austria. Mostly we managed quite well speaking English and with our primitive French. Bonjour! The idea is that the person reading the answers can easily see the Yes or No and can then read the text for the Yes answers. At the same time, it minimizes the size of the output in printed pages. Incidentally, the Yes/No and the detailed answers are substituted from <TAG>s as described above. Ideally I want to do this using variable fonts (I can do it without too much difficulty with a fixed font). I suppose that this is possible as I saw a function somewhere(the name of which I forget) that returns the pixel length of a string so I can keep adding another word until I pass the place that I want to stop and then take one word back, chuck in a NL and carry on. Ray
10. Re: New User
- Posted by Dan Moyer <DANIELMOYER at prodigy.net> Jun 26, 2003
- 675 views
(Hello, & welcome Peter) Ray, >From a purely readability aspect, maybe putting the "yes" or "no" at the end of a line by itself, with any "yes" info on a new line would be even easier to read? Just a thought. Dan Moyer ----- Original Message ----- From: "Ray Tomes" <rtomes at ihug.co.nz> <snip> > Another string function that I want is for the same program. I want to > output some text in a text box with automatic wrap at a point NOT the same > as the width of the text field and then put some more text to begin at the > point where the wrapping was occurring and also to wrap but now using the > full window. e.g. the result might look like this: > > (my text box is this big) ---------------------------------------------V > (my wrap point is initially set here)-----------------V > > Did you ever live in another country? If so, please > tell about that experience. No. ~ > > Did you ever travel overseas to countries that speak > different languages than your native language? If so, > please tell about your experience. Yes. I went to > Europe and visited England, France, Italy and Germany with very brief > stops in Switzerland and Austria. Mostly we managed quite well speaking > English and with our primitive French. Bonjour! > > The idea is that the person reading the answers can easily see the Yes or > No and can then read the text for the Yes answers. At the same time, it > minimizes the size of the output in printed pages. Incidentally, the > Yes/No and the detailed answers are substituted from <TAG>s as described > above. > > Ideally I want to do this using variable fonts (I can do it without too > much difficulty with a fixed font). I suppose that this is possible as I > saw a function somewhere(the name of which I forget) that returns the > pixel length of a string so I can keep adding another word until I pass > the place that I want to stop and then take one word back, chuck in a NL > and carry on. > > Ray > > > > TOPICA - Start your own email discussion group. FREE! > >
11. Re: New User
- Posted by Ray Tomes <rtomes at ihug.co.nz> Jun 26, 2003
- 664 views
Dan Moyer wrote: >>From a purely readability aspect, maybe putting the "yes" or "no" at the end > of a line by itself, with any "yes" info on a new line would be even easier > to read? > > Just a thought. Yes, Dan you are right. It is an existing application and many questions have No as the answer. With the Yes answer some have short or long answers so I am trying to get the short ones on the same line to cut down lines. The reason is that then most forms will fit on one page which is highly desirable. A peculiar situation for sure. Ray
12. Re: New User
- Posted by Greg Haberek <g.haberek at comcast.net> Jun 26, 2003
- 668 views
> function replace (structure findstring, structure replacestring, > structure originalstring) > atom ix > ix=find (findstring, originalstring) > return originalstring[1..ix-1] & replacestring & > originalstring[ix+length(findstring)..length(originalstring)] > end function > > again I haven't done any check to see if it exists. But you can see how > string functions in Euphoria almost write themselves - particularly when > you know how useful find is. keep in mind, match() works better when finding chucks of strings in larger chunks of strings. if i want to find "DEF" in a string "ABCDEFG" i would use i = match("DEF", "ABCDEFG") in which i = 4 as the first position to which "DEF" matches. it does get a bit confusing sometimes, but it works well. > Ideally I want to do this using variable fonts (I can do it without too > much difficulty with a fixed font). I suppose that this is possible as I > saw a function somewhere(the name of which I forget) that returns the > pixel length of a string so I can keep adding another word until I pass > the place that I want to stop and then take one word back, chuck in a NL > and carry on. the function, if you're using Win32Lib is getTextExtent() which returns (off the top of my head) {max_height, max_width, min_height, min_width, total_height, total_width} as for EUwinGUI, i'm sure there is an equivalent function somewhere. this works on all fonts, fixed or variable widths. ~Greg g.haberek at comcast.net
13. Re: New User
- Posted by Ray Tomes <rtomes at ihug.co.nz> Jun 26, 2003
- 666 views
gertie at visionsix.com wrote: > Those are in String.e, by Normand Blais. Scroll down to left_str , etc. Kat I have downloaded at least 182 things from Euphoria site and people still keep mentioning new ones. Do I need to get all 1100? LOL, Ray
14. Re: New User
- Posted by Igor Kachan <kinz at peterlink.ru> Jun 26, 2003
- 656 views
Hi Ray, > gertie at visionsix.com wrote: > > Those are in String.e, by Normand Blais. Scroll down to left_str , etc. > > Kat > > I have downloaded at least 182 things from Euphoria site and people still > keep mentioning new ones. Do I need to get all 1100? > > LOL, Ray You may be just happy with just ex.exe or exw.exe or exu , but if you'll get all 1100 you'll be very very very happy. not Do you understand how happy I am if I have many of old versions and plus these 1100 on my hd ? 8-) Regards, Igor Kachan kinz at peterlink.ru
15. Re: New User
- Posted by gertie at visionsix.com Jun 26, 2003
- 673 views
On 26 Jun 2003, at 22:03, Ray Tomes wrote: > > > gertie at visionsix.com wrote: > > Those are in String.e, by Normand Blais. Scroll down to left_str , etc. > > Kat > > I have downloaded at least 182 things from Euphoria site and people still > keep mentioning new ones. Do I need to get all 1100? Only if you need them! Some are so basic, we wonder why they were not in the language from the start. When i found Eu, i suggested RobC take a look at mirc! Kat