Squeak mini-meta-FAQ
Chris Burkert
christian.burkert at s2000.tu-chemnitz.de
Mon Mar 10 16:19:49 UTC 2003
just my opinion ...
goran.hultgren at bluefish.se wrote:
> (Note to all: this is a first draft - perhaps we could stuff it into a
> Swiki page and then somehow schedule to get it posted once a week? Just
> an idea, if you all think this is a pretty daft idea then we can forget
> about it)
>
> Hi Squeak newbie!
>
> This is the mini-meta-FAQ that is (or soon will be) posted weekly on
> this list. If you are new in the Squeak community, please, pretty please
> read it through - it contains important information that everyone active
> on this mailinglist needs to know. And it is short and... well, short!
> :-)
>
> Squeak mini-meta-FAQ
> ==========================
>
> www.squeak.org - The starting point of Squeak.
>
> This site contains a necessity of information to get started and has
downloads of the current newest release of Squeak for a number of
platforms. But confusing as it may seem, this website is *not* the place
where you will find tons of juicy information about Squeak. Instead you
should go to:
>
>
> http://minnow.cc.gatech.edu/squeak - The Squeak swiki
>
> This is the central for all kinds of information regarding Squeak
with more than 600 pages with interesting information. The swiki is
searchable so before you ask a question on the mailing list, make sure
you have at least done one obvious silly little search here - it will
save you from exposing yourself as a total newbie from the first
posting! In fact, by reading stuff on this Swiki you may just be able to
avoid the Big Red Newbie stamp on your forehead. :-)
>
> Just to name two of the most important pages on the Squeak swiki:
>
> http://minnow.cc.gatech.edu/squeak/471 - The Squeak FAQ
> Do I need to tell you what to do with it?
>
> http://minnow.cc.gatech.edu/squeak/398 - How to submit bugs, fixes
and enhancements:
> Very important to read before doing a blunder like say posting code
simply copied into an email. :-)
Is this so important for a newbie?
> http://www.squeakfoundation.org - The Squeak foundation swiki
>
> This is another much, much smaller Swiki with a slightly different
focus. It focuses on community related issues, hosts various "projects"
that are community related and is also the current "home" for the Squeak
Guides.
>
>
> http://swiki.squeakfoundation.org/squeakfoundation/70 - The Guides pages
>
> This is the top page of the Guides. The Guides are circa 6 people
that are trying to "guide" the community forward in discussions,
decisions and the ongoing work of evolving Squeak. The guides do all
their coordination communication on the Squeak Foundation mailinglist
(commonly referred to as the sqf-list) which is not the same as this
list, commonly referred to as the squeak-dev list.
>
> The two pages below are probably the most important ones right now:
>
> http://swiki.squeakfoundation.org/squeakfoundation/73 - The Guide Roles
> How should you otherwise know which guide does what?
> http://swiki.squeakfoundation.org/squeakfoundation/73 - Modularizing
the Squeak image
> The top page describing the ongoing effort to split the image into
packages.
>
>
> http://map2.squeakfoundation.org/sm - SqueakMap
>
> If you have downloaded Squeak version 3.4 and later you have probably
found the "Package loader" tool. That tool communicates using http with
a master server holding the catalog of available Squeak packages. The
url above points to the web frontend of the master server which is used
for registering and updating package registrations (which currently can
not be done from inside Squeak) as well as looking at the catalog in HTML.
>
> Ok, now you are armed with the most important meta knowledge to
survive here in the Squeak jungle. But remember - the Squeak community
is a very friendly place - you should not be afraid to post newbie
questions to the list. But you will get a lot more respect if you have
done a bit of homework first - like reading the FAQ and perhaps firing
off a search on the Squeak Swiki. :-)
>
> regards, the Squeak community
Would be fine if the lines are not longer than ~70 characters. Otherwise
it could be displayed wrong or bad in some mail-readers.
Regards
Chris Burkert
--
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Student of applied Computer Science at Chemnitz University of Technology
http://www.chrisburkert.de/ chris at chrisburkert.de
------------------------------------------------------------------------
"I invented the term Object-Oriented, and I can tell you I did not have
C++ in mind." - Alan Kay --> http://www.whysmalltalk.com/
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