
Hi, Thank you Damien for the reply. I would like to start with developing documentation tool for smalltalk classes. For that I want to understand the supportive of the smalltalk classes for a documentation tool. Are they developed with that kind of supportive manner (annotations ect.. ) . Where can I find the example codes for the reference. Thank you, Malintha Adikari
From: damien.cassou@gmail.com Date: Wed, 27 Feb 2013 08:03:20 +0100 Subject: Re: [Esug-list] Join ESUG for GSOC 2013 To: malintha.adikari@hotmail.com CC: esug-list@lists.esug.org; carla.griggio@gmail.com; janko.mivsek@eranova.si
Dear Malintha,
On Tue, Feb 26, 2013 at 12:37 PM, Malintha Adikari <malintha.adikari@hotmail.com> wrote:
I am final year computer engineering undergraduate from University of Peradeniya. I would like to join ESUG for GSOC 2013. I am interesting about your organization & projects. Could you please tell me more details about the available projects if any
thank you for your interest. I don't know if there will be ESUG projects this year for GSOC, maybe others will have more information. If you want to have a chance to get selected in case we would have projects, I advise you to start with these little exercises:
- implement in Pharo/Smalltalk a double-linked list using a test-driven-development (TDD) approach; - implement a tool that takes any Smalltalk class as input and produces HTML with the documentation of the class (instance variables, class comment) and its methods (parameters, method comment). That's just like a small javadoc tool.
Don't hesitate to ask for help:
- on stackoverflow.com (with tags #smalltalk, #squeak, #pharo...) - on mailing lists (see Squeak and Pharo websites) - on IRC (see Squeak and Pharo websites)
Best,
-- Damien Cassou http://damiencassou.seasidehosting.st
"Success is the ability to go from one failure to another without losing enthusiasm." Winston Churchill
-- Damien Cassou http://damiencassou.seasidehosting.st
"Success is the ability to go from one failure to another without losing enthusiasm." Winston Churchill