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Re: Release schedule
From: |
Markus Hitter |
Subject: |
Re: Release schedule |
Date: |
Tue, 1 Apr 2003 20:29:08 +0200 |
Am Dienstag, 01.04.03 um 17:09 Uhr schrieb Tim Harrison:
No one is suggesting that adding NSToolbar, by itself, is going to
make GNUstep unstable. The problem is that GNUstep is unstable now,
and spending the time to track Cocoa will take time away from fixing
that instability.
This implies a person not implementing NSToolbar would track down
instabilities instead. I don't think this is the case.
That's how I experience participians in public projects: Those brave
guys working enthusiatic on any part of the project, as long as it
belongs to the project, are rare. Most of them have some goal in mind
and are working towards a solution for it.
One of the things I'm concerned about is the uncertain wording of the
goals for GNUstep.
That's because GNUstep users have so different goals? Some love it for
the superior API, some for it's superior UI and some see it as a Cocoa
clone for non-OS X. Which of them do you want to get rid of? Hopefully
none.
However, the general feeling (amongst anti-Cocoa-trackers, at least
;)) is that having a solid, non-changing base as a reference to work
from is extremely important.
Sorry, I fail to see how following Cocoa whould conflict with that
goal? Cocoa's changes to existing API are minor, already implemented in
GNUstep and will be even smaller in the future as Apple always had to
provide some sort of backwards compatibility. Additions aren't changes.
Am I wrong?
Cheers,
Markus
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Dipl. Ing. Markus Hitter
http://www.jump-ing.de/