Kent Beck invented TDD while programming in Smalltalk. You first extend the environment with tests, then add the code to make them green. All without ever having to restart the "program".
Yes, on retina plain SqueakJS uses half the resolution, and by default the canvas interpolates. It looks sharper if you force pixel doubling: https://squeak.js.org/run/#url=https://freudenbergs.de/bert/... (by appending…
Someone broke that page (it's a Lively page, meaning it's editable by anyone). Here is a stand-alone version, running ThingLab: http://www.cdglabs.org/thinglab/
Large data (file contents) is stored in IndexedDB, only settings and file meta data in localStorage.
Works for me in Firefox 34.0.5, default settings. Would be great if you could post instructions on how to reproduce at https://github.com/bertfreudenberg/SqueakJS/issues
Yep. I reported that a while ago, but it's not fixed yet: https://bugs.webkit.org/show_bug.cgi?id=136803
Kent Beck invented TDD while programming in Smalltalk. You first extend the environment with tests, then add the code to make them green. All without ever having to restart the "program".
Yes, on retina plain SqueakJS uses half the resolution, and by default the canvas interpolates. It looks sharper if you force pixel doubling: https://squeak.js.org/run/#url=https://freudenbergs.de/bert/... (by appending…
Someone broke that page (it's a Lively page, meaning it's editable by anyone). Here is a stand-alone version, running ThingLab: http://www.cdglabs.org/thinglab/
Large data (file contents) is stored in IndexedDB, only settings and file meta data in localStorage.
Works for me in Firefox 34.0.5, default settings. Would be great if you could post instructions on how to reproduce at https://github.com/bertfreudenberg/SqueakJS/issues
Yep. I reported that a while ago, but it's not fixed yet: https://bugs.webkit.org/show_bug.cgi?id=136803