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.
Here's a summary of changes since the 0.9 release:
Nice work guys !
Laurent
On Mon, Jan 16, 2012 at 1:06 AM, Nicolas Petton petton.nicolas@gmail.comwrote:
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.
Here's a summary of changes since the 0.9 release:
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.
Here's a summary of changes since the 0.9 release:
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