From: Hibou57 (Yannick Duchêne) on 13 Feb 2010 07:08 ---- Message Usenet réexpédié ---- De: "Hibou57 (Yannick Duchêne)" <yannick_duchene(a)yahoo.fr> Groupe de discussion: fr.comp.lang.ada Sujet: FunnelWeb's tutorial comes with an Ada example Date: Sat, 13 Feb 2010 12:59:05 +0100 URL: message://<op.u72d8re4hgxj9a(a)garhos> Hello you and you, You may know about literate programing (weither or not you use it). If so, you may be interested about FunnelWeb, old, but there. I was having a quick look at its tutorial, and when I arrived at part 4, â A Complete Example â, I said â Ouch, which language is using with/use like Ada ? â. Then I looked again, and Yes, the tutorial comes with an Ada example. Short, but there. http://www.ross.net/funnelweb/tutorial/example.html It seems at the time, this same FunnelWeb was used (think the tutorial comes with an Ada example in this context) to create a data integrity check product (as claimed on the home page). Nice to see these three things together, isn't it ? -- No-no, this isn't an oops ...or I hope (TM) - Don't blame me... I'm just not lucky
From: Hibou57 (Yannick Duchêne) on 13 Feb 2010 15:57 > You may know about literate programing (weither or not you use it). If > so, > you may be interested about FunnelWeb, old, but there. I was having a > quick look at its tutorial, and when I arrived at part 4, â A Complete > Example â, I said â Ouch, which language is using with/use like Ada ? â. > Then I looked again, and Yes, the tutorial comes with an Ada example. > Short, but there. > > http://www.ross.net/funnelweb/tutorial/example.html > > It seems at the time, this same FunnelWeb was used (think the tutorial > comes with an Ada example in this context) to create a data integrity > check product (as claimed on the home page). > > Nice to see these three things together, isn't it ? Another reference to Ada in the same area. Now talking about a Wiki-like literate programming "language" , http://lambda-the-ultimate.org/node/1336 Someone has exclaimed : > Sounds great! > Does it to do Ada? ;-) (Yes, it does!) This post is the opportunity for another quote. If you think Ada is as much an attitude (in one area at least) and fulfilling some requirement as it is a language which enforce these both, then you may not feel I'm out of topic if I quote this, which does not contains even a single word about Ada (namely / by name) : http://lambda-the-ultimate.org/node/3663 > I was one of the original authors at IBM Research. The code was sold > to another company and was a commercial product for years. It was > withdrawn from the market and given to me to open source it. > - > I discovered that I was unable to understand programs I wrote 15 > years ago. I knew WHAT it did but I did not know WHY it did it or > WHY it did it that way. > - > The issue of literate programming is an issue of writing a program > that LIVES rather than writing a program that WORKS. (while this can be pleasant too, if it works, we like both I suppose) As last words, for interested peoples, I was thinking that as literate is just a transformation of one text into another (or others), then XML + XSLT may be the most natural choice here. I've searched about it, and it seems indeed someones already though the same. But as I do not like to speak alone (said with cheese), I will not talk about it unless someone react to this topic, Have a nice time -- No-no, this isn't an oops ...or I hope (TM) - Don't blame me... I'm just not lucky
From: Hibou57 (Yannick Duchêne) on 13 Feb 2010 16:06 Le Sat, 13 Feb 2010 21:57:11 +0100, Hibou57 (Yannick Duchêne) <yannick_duchene(a)yahoo.fr> a écrit: > Now talking about a Wiki-like literate programming "language" , Erratum. Was confused with another project. This one is *not* the one about a literate programming "language" using a wiki-like syntax (that's another), it's the one about a wiki showing literate programming in actions (on little snips). -- No-no, this isn't an oops ...or I hope (TM) - Don't blame me... I'm just not lucky
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