Pharo is an excellent environment for building interactive applications.
In part 4 of this series, I take a look at a planning tool for time slot based planning. This is not so common in software development, but is used a lot in simple and complicated contexts. In the example, there are 4 rooms that can be scheduled between 8:00 and 18:00 at a granularity of 5 minutes. An element panel is added as a new kind of drag panel containing prototypes of the tasks that can be planned. Here the prototypes are no longer the squares from the earlier drag panels, their height depends on the amount of time they take. When a task prototype is dragged to the plan board, the responsible party can be selected using spotter. https://vimeo.com/134547026 Stephan Screenshot from 2015-07-26 19:24:31.png (89K) Download Attachment |
wow this is very cool, well done. Nice to see a face and hear a voice in a pharo tutorial :) Will give it a try. Would be nice if this combined with the pomodoro tool . On Sun, Jul 26, 2015 at 8:27 PM Stephan Eggermont <[hidden email]> wrote: Pharo is an excellent environment for building interactive applications. |
In reply to this post by Stephan Eggermont-3
Stephan
you are proving that people can use Morphic to build non traditional applications and without roassal :) Stef Le 26/7/15 19:27, Stephan Eggermont a écrit : > Pharo is an excellent environment for building interactive > applications. In part 4 of this series, I take a look at a planning > tool for time slot based planning. This is not so common in software > development, but is used a lot in simple and complicated contexts. In > the example, there are 4 rooms that can be scheduled between 8:00 and > 18:00 at a granularity of 5 minutes. An element panel is added as a > new kind of drag panel containing prototypes of the tasks that can be > planned. Here the prototypes are no longer the squares from the > earlier drag panels, their height depends on the amount of time they > take. When a task prototype is dragged to the plan board, the > responsible party can be selected using spotter. > > https://vimeo.com/134547026 > > Stephan > |
On 27-07-15 09:38, stepharo wrote:
> you are proving that people can use Morphic to build non traditional > applications and without roassal :) The Roassal examples made it much easier to get started. Roassal with Glamour was excellent for building applications with lots of visualizations. I hope having some Morphic examples will give people an easier start. Stephan |
We would love to have your demos on Bloc soon :) Doru On Mon, Jul 27, 2015 at 10:30 AM, Stephan Eggermont <[hidden email]> wrote: On 27-07-15 09:38, stepharo wrote: |
Le 27/7/15 11:04, Tudor Girba a écrit :
We all thought the same ;)
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