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- Subject: Re: Where Tcl and Tk went wrong; {SPAM?} Re: Where Tcl and Tk went wrong
- From: Aleirade <aleirade@...>
- Date: Wed, 31 Mar 2010 14:22:15 -0300
--------- Mensagem Original --------
De: Lua list <lua@bazar2.conectiva.com.br>
Para: Lua list <lua@bazar2.conectiva.com.br>
Assunto: Re: Where Tcl and Tk went wrong; {SPAM?} Re: Where Tcl and Tk went
wrong
Data: 31/03/10 14:04
> On Wed, Mar 31, 2010 at 12:52 PM, steve donovan
> <steve.j.donovan@gmail.com> wrote:
> > On Wed, Mar 31, 2010 at 6:46 PM, Javier Guerra Giraldez
> > <javier@guerrag.com> wrote:
> >> if all you want is encapsulation, polymorphism
> >> and nice syntax, then you don't need any of "several competing
> >> options".
> >
> > OK, but you have to get into metaprogramming fairly quickly - and from
> > that sentence, I don't know which Lua OOP model you're thinking about
> > ;) It's probably the standard 'metatable.__index == metatable' but
> > maybe not....
>
>
> the beauty is that it doesn't matter! as long as your 'methods' are
> functions that accept the 'object' as the first parameter, and are
> accessible with table lookups (either directly, or with metatables),
> you can use the obj:mth(parms) syntax.
>
> that's why i don't buy the "we need to standardize!" cries. all of
> the 'extra' "OOP models" support this syntax, making interoperability
> mostly seamless. and useless too, since i still haven't seen one that
> gives any real advantage. i find far easier to do it by hand in the
> very (very) few places where i've needed some inheritance. in most
> cases simply using the module itself as the 'class' even takes most of
> the metatable handling out of sight.
>
> --
> Javier
>
This works fine until I want to subclass a class made by someone else using
my own OOP model which I already use extensively in my own code.
Andre
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