[squeak-dev] Re: [Esug-list] [ANN] Amber Smalltalk 0.9.1 is out!

Stéphane Ducasse stephane.ducasse at inria.fr
Mon Jan 16 18:19:27 UTC 2012


Thanks for all this good energy nicolas!
Keep pushing :)

Stef

On Jan 16, 2012, at 1:06 AM, Nicolas Petton wrote:

> About 4 moons have passed and Amber - the Smalltalk for the web - has 
> during that time moved forward quite a lot. Since the 0.9 release back 
> in september we have made about 250 commits and closed 52 issues of 
> about 75 reported during these months.
> 
> Now with over 43 forks on github and more than 230 followers the
> project:
> 
>        http://www.amber-lang.net
> 
> ...is live and kicking!
> 
> A lot of cool stuff is being done in those forks and not in the master 
> repository, like for example the gaming framework called Ludus by
> Bernat 
> Romagosa:
> 
>        https://github.com/bromagosa/amber/tree/ludus
> 
> ...or Ambrhino by Stefan Krecher - Amber running in Rhino:
> 
>        https://github.com/StefanKrecher/Ambrhino
> 
> So, why would you take a look at Amber?
> 
> In our opinion Amber is perfectly positioned for the HTML5 onslaught
> and 
> the explosion of all-things-javascript like for example Nodejs.
> 
> Amber plays very well with others and can seamlessly use Javascript 
> libraries! It's a *real* Smalltalk, the environment is all there 
> including Workspace, Transcript, Browser, 
> senders/implementors/references to class, TestRunner, Inspectors, code 
> editing with syntax coloring and a Debugger. There is no image or 
> interpreter, all compilation is incremental.
> 
> JavaScript is quite a broken language with lots of traps and odd
> quirks. 
> It is the assembler of the Internet and we love it for that, but we 
> don't want to write applications in it. Smalltalk is immensely cleaner, 
> both syntactically and semantically with a simple class model and a 
> lightweight syntax for closures. It is in many ways a perfect match for 
> the Good Parts of JavaScript.
> 
> And having a true live interactive incremental development environment 
> where you can build your application directly in the browser is 
> unbeatable...
> 
> 
> Below follows a summary of the major changes since release 0.9. We hope 
> you join us in developing Amber and having fun! Fork at github, join in 
> #amber-lang on freenode and hop onto the mailing list.
> 
> regards, Nicolas & Göran ...and a BIG thanks to everyone that are 
> involved in the project!
> ---------------------------------------------
> 
> Here's a summary of changes since the 0.9 release:
> 
> - 80 new unit tests written
> - 52 issues fixed
> - All classes in Kernel-Objects, Kernel-Classes and Kernel-Methods has
> been documented
> - New documentation framework (see
> http://amber-lang.net/documentation.html)
> - Better class organisations, "Kernel" package split into several
> packages
> - First class packages have replaced class categories
> - Internet Explorer 7+ compatibility
> - New Announcement framework ported from Pharo
> - New console-based REPL written in Amber using node.js
> - Symbol class implemented together with object identity and #==
> - New OrderedCollection and Set implementation
> - Dictionary can now have any kind of object as keys. String-key
> dictionary has been renamed HashedCollection
> - New TwitterWall example
> - Improved HTML Canvas, now compatible with IE7
> - Improved JSObjectProxy for seemless JavaScript objects access from
> Amber
> - No more jQuery binding. Amber is fully capable of sending messages to
> JavaScript objects
> 
> 
> 
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