I love Pharo :) All the power of a Smalltalk for the 21 century, a small but very nice community, decent library support (but not huge), and a good FFI interface when this is not enough.
estebanlm
not with mlem (or I did not find how) ;)
Oops… most people now ignores… I meant :)
This is what Smalltalk is all about, and it has been like that since it’s origin: you basically program in the debugger, you program running, you change something, you proceed the debugger, etc. That’s why technics like TDD, refactoring, and others were developed in Smalltalk and just later translated to other languages (and always lacking, since no one reproduces the live programming experience 100%). As the time passed, attention has moved to other languages and most people not ignores what it was to program like that. But there are still some implementations around: I work with Pharo (https://pharo.org), and I can to say is all what you ask for in this post :)
for another (other than Tuxedo) EU based solution: https://slimbook.es/en/
(They are at Valencia, Spain).
But I have no about idea its quality as I have never tried one.
I have been using Manjaro as my daily driver for years now (I work making a programming language), and I have absolutely no complains ;) ... but this thread is to talk about hardware :P
yes, it is.
I have a tuxedo. I love it. But...
- it supports just its own version of linux (TuxedoOS, based on KDE) and Ubuntu. I use Majaro and I have to tweak it the same way as I would do it with any other non-linux computer.
- I had a problem with sound and needed to send the computer to germany so they were able to check at it and fix it (replacing the mother board). Client service is good, but I live at 1w distance of germany (france)... what happens with people living far away?
- Is certainly good... but not cheap :)
nice :)
this is old, the official repositories (extra) has already been updated to 115 a couple of days ago.
yes, I know that :) What I want is a way to make, for example, rivers that traverses more than one "cell". Or to force a mountain range.