The Amber language is deeply inspired by Smalltalk. It is designed to make client-side development faster and easier. Amber includes a live development environment with a class browser, workspace, unit test runner, transcript, object inspector and debugger. Amber is written in itself, including the compiler, and compiles into efficient JavaScript, mapping one-to-one with the JS equivalent. The app
Daniel H. H. Ingalls Learning Research Group Xerox Palo Alto Research Center BYTE Magazine, August 1981. (c) by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., NY. Copied from http://users.ipa.net/~dwighth/smalltalk/byte_aug81/design_principles_behind_smalltalk.html Scanned in and converted to HTML (with recreated graphics) by Dwight Hughes. The purpose of the Smalltalk project is to provide computer support for
“Yay, Juan. You GO, guy! …a great example of malleable software (and a clever mind) at work.” Dan Ingalls “I like it… It’s nice and clean and simple and pretty. Nice stuff!” Alan Kay “I think you have a very elegant design aesthetic.” John Maloney Cuis is a free Smalltalk-80 environment with a specific set of goals: being simple and powerful. It is also portable to any platform, fast and efficient
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