Squeak User and Reference Material
Last updated at 9:19 pm UTC on 20 May 2007
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Unofficial user manuals and code snippits to help with Squeak programming. As of May 2007, these materials have not been officially reviewed nor used extensively; nevertheless, nothing should be blatantly wrong. If you use these resources, please leave a comment at the bottom of the page indicating how useful it was.
If you are looking for tutorials, see Squeak Tutorials; It is currently much more organized than this page.
There are lots at Maarten Maartensz's Squeak pages
- The Squeak Language Stated Informally
- by Maarten Maartensz
- In this section I will state and describe the Squeak Language and do so in two ways, namely first informally in English, and then formally though also in English, but now using a few simple formal conventions for writing formal grammars that will be first explained.
- The Squeak Language Stated Semi-Formally
- by Maarten Maartensz
- The following more or less formal specification of the Squeak Language is derived from an EBNF definition of Squeak 2.7alpha by - Dwight Hughes. It comes from the Swiki, and should be considered only a snapshot of Squeak at this version.
By "EBNF" is meant "Extended Backus-Naur Formalism". This is a way to write formal grammars widely used in linguistics (and elsewhere) and is named after its originators.
- Squeak User Manual
- by Maarten Maartensz
- Welcome to the Introduction to Everything in the User Manual. This User Manual seeks to introduce you to Squeak. It does so by describing what you see and can do.
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