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Re: Cocotron used for a real-world app


From: Markus Hitter
Subject: Re: Cocotron used for a real-world app
Date: Wed, 29 Oct 2008 17:18:30 +0100


Am 29.10.2008 um 14:45 schrieb Gregory John Casamento:

There's no reason any company porting to Windows should ever choose Cocotron over us. We're more complete.

I humbly disagree, Greg. Very obviously, there _are_ reasons why people choose Cocotron over GNUstep. Just as obviously, these reasons are not to find in the area of stability or completeness.

Xcode integration is a big bonus for Mac heads, as one can be an true expert in one development environment only. If you have to learn another one, thats a duplication of a lot of kmowledge and most people would consider this as a waste.

Looking at GNUstep installation ... this is 2008 and 999 of 1000 Computer users don't know how to set up a compilation environment. So, installation from source won't cut it for anybody but developer them selfs. Even most developers prefer ready-to-use packages these days.

There is a Live CD, there are apt and rpm packages, but ... the Live CD won't give me my favourite distro (Ubuntu). So I tried the GNUMail package in Ubuntu:

- GNUMail doesn't appear in Gnome's application menu.

- Once one found out how to start the app (hefty googling to find / usr/bin/GNUMail), GNUMail appears totally disintegrated from the remaining desktop.

- I've yet to find out what's the use of this Dock-like icon at the lower left. It appears and distracts.

- Menus won't be recognised as such by most Linuxers. Yet another learning curve.

- Looking at the terminal (the only way to start the app), thousands of warnings and errors appear. Much worse than what I've ever seen in any other app and so many, GNUMail is actually noticeable slowed down. It appears to complain about missing fonts.

- There's no reasonable way to get an more up to date GNUstep environment, as gnustep.org doesn't feature an apt repository. Those project-specific package repos are very often seen these days, at big projects like Wine, as well as at one-developer-projects like Gerris, to take two examples.

While GNUMail is just an example here, I see no hint how other apps or even developing with GNUstep would be more fun. Compiling everything from scratch, every week? Thanks, I want to concentrate on my own tasks.

There's only one thing you can point your finger at me: I should have filed bugs.


I think these are enough samples for why many people choose native apps and development environments over GNUstep.


I don't think we would have this problem.

I very much hope you don't see Cocotron as an enemy. They did a lot of work and did some of that work better than GNUstep.


MarKus


P.S.: Sorry for the venting, some GNUsteppers work hard.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Dipl. Ing. Markus Hitter
http://www.jump-ing.de/








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