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added: Sun, 16th October 2005 | 667 views | 0x in favourites
feed url: http://www.artima.com/weblogs/feeds/weblogs.rss
Artima Weblogs [Viewed: 74]
In this post I clarify my position with respect to mixins, I show a few common design mistakes and I suggest some alternative solution.
Contrarians reject the majority opinion and often have personal reasons to degrade Agile. These writings often disqualify themselves through bias, thus failing to benefit the community. But non-contrarians - practitioners who tend to support the majority view - may be in the best position to drag the skeletons out of the closet.
Some update about my experiences with the EeePC.
A mixin is a collection of methods that can be injected into a class. The mixin technique consists in building classes by composing reusable mixins. The advantages and disadvantages of the technique are very much debated. I will focus on the negative aspects.
The next version of ScalaTest will include a set of matchers. These matchers demonstrate the kind of DSL notation you can create in Scala. In this post, I give a sneak preview of ScalaTest matchers, and ask for feedback.
The latest version of ScalaTest includes a trait named SpecDasher, which when mixed into a Spec facilitates a more concise expression of specification-style tests. It is deprecated, however, and may be removed in a future release depending on user feedback. What's your opinion?
The latest version of ScalaTest, a testing tool for Scala and Java developers, includes a concise way to test private methods and support for behavior-driven development.
The next Flex/AIR workshop with James Ward and myself will be February 25-27, 2009, Crested Butte, Colorado, This is right before the JavaPosse Roundup, so you can get the most out of your airline ticket.
Because of a conflict with the SD conference, we moved the Roundup to March 3-6.
Old 2.0 (I've got more; stop me if you've heard them before.)
Busting some myths that have sprung up around Scala.
Artima's first published book, Programming in Scala, made its bookstore debut last week at the Devoxx conference in Antwerp, Belgium, where it sold out. Twice.
They goad you into "Standard Edition" but once you change, you can't go back. No matter how bad it is. Change at your peril.
After a few weeks of work, version 3 of the decorator module is finally out. The new version is a major rewrite of the original implementation, lots of things have been improved under the hood, and the documentation has had a major overhaul too. The module is hosted on the PyPI site: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/decorator.
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