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by tronical
1705 days ago
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One of the lesson that I believe is being learned is that general purpose programming languages for UIs make it difficult to do tooling, especially with dynamic typing. This particular approach (.60) is not a general purpose programming language and it's strongly typed. It's designed for the user interface, not for writing the rest of the program in it. I feel this is rather different from the tcl/tk applications we used to see? |
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The problem is that current generations cannot see beyond their vi/emacs CLI setups and are too invested into HTML/CS/JS stacks to see otherwise.
Some quickly picked examples,
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NeWS
"Smalltalk usage for UI prototyping in Thales industrial context"
https://youtu.be/Oq1RSDn2P5Y?t=1030
"Interface Builder's Alternative Lisp Timeline"
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=21828622
Which by the way, makes the binding Objective-C / Smalltalk /Lisp in UI design.