I am not actually a Smalltalk newbie, but still find it sometomes
hard to get into areas I've never touched before. For some stuff
that was related mostly to problems with encoding and decoding
between utf-8 and utf-85 on both Windows and Linux and strange
differences between these platforms, I thought I'd use something
that peopl "out there" use daily.
I chose python. I had never written anything in Python before, but
it was easy to stipple together a few working programs. It took me
just a few hours to find out about Skyper and some important
language constructs and stuff. It was a pleasant journey for two
reasons:
- No need to learn any tools. Just an editor and a command line
and you're on yur journey
- You find lots of documentation and examples on the web. It
feels like VB in the days: type�� a few keywords into your web
browser and copy the sources for a 70% solution of your problem
Back when I was young and cared for whether my preferred language
was popular or not, I would be depressed by the experience.
Remember, I tried Python because things were hard in Smalltalk.
So spot the message here... ;-)
Joachim