On 9/26/12, Levente Uzonyi leves@elte.hu wrote:
On Tue, 25 Sep 2012, Hernán Morales Durand wrote:
Hi folks, I am rewriting packages to be compatible or more portable between Smalltalks. Code Critics gives the following information on my packages:
- #cr, #crlf, #lf, #space, #tab, #findTokens:, ... are not part of the
ANSI string protocol.
#cr and #lf are not part of the ANSI stream protocol.
The ANSI standard does not support #asInteger and #asString on Object.
Some collection methods are not ANSI compatible: #pairsDo:,
#collect:thenDo:, #reject:thenDo:, #detectSum:, #valuesDo:, #keysSortedSafely, #new:withAll:, etc.
Does anyone have an idea on how to transform those sends to be ANSI compatible?
Is there an ANSI compatible Smalltalk implementation out there? I doubt it. If I were you, then I'd use a compatibility layer like Sport or Grease, instead of relying on the ANSI standard.
But to answer your question: you should check how these methods are implemented and check if the implementation is ANSI compatible or not. In most cases they are:
string cr ==> Character cr asString
#lf same as above
stream cr ==> stream nextPut: Character cr
#lf, #space, #tab similar to #cr
stream crlf ==> stream nextPut: Character cr; nextPut: Character lf
#findTokens: ==> no ANSI compatible method. If the argument is a single character, then you can create a stream on the collection and use #upTo: to find the parts.
collection collect: aBlock thenDo: anotherBlock ==> (collection collect: aBlock) do: anotherBlock
collection detectSum: aBlock ==> collection inject: 0 into: [ :sum :each | sum + (aBlock value: each) ]
#valuesDo: ==> use #do: or #keysAndValuesDo: instead
#keysSortedSafely ==> sorting is not part of the ANSI standard, only SortedCollection is, so you can use something like: collection keys asSortedCollection: [ :a :b | <copy the contents of the sort block here from #keysSortedSafely> ]
Array new: x withAll: y ==> (Array new: x) atAllPut: y
Levente
P.S.: My problem with the ANSI standard is that it seems more like something that documents the common things in Smalltalks at the time of its creation instead of a complete and future-proof base API.
+1, in the 90ties.
The ANSI standard is not maintained. http://www.smalltalk.org/versions/ANSIStandardSmalltalk.html
--Hannes
Best regards,
Hernán