Home brewers

Bob Sneidar bobs at twft.com
Wed Oct 3 12:42:07 EDT 2012


You would need to make the distinction about developing in house. I am strictly an in house developer, although some of what I do or plan to do might find it's way into a commercial app eventually. Would I be considered a home-brewer or a pro? I am certainly still an amateur! 

Bob


On Oct 3, 2012, at 9:20 AM, Timothy Miller wrote:

> On Oct 2, 2012, at 1:58 PM, J. Landman Gay wrote:
> 
>> I just meant that anyone developing cross platform apps (Windows, OS X, mobile) couldn't use the same code base for all builds. The menu is strictly an OS X service, so there would have to be a lot of code-branching for each platform, and lots of specialized handlers to accomodate similar functionality on non-Mac machines. I was probably a little presumptuous, forgetting that some folks develop only for their own use.
> 
> Not presumptuous.
> 
> From your previous message I got the impression that the number of home-brewers on the list is relatively small.
> 
> I'm wondering: home-brewers / professional developers on the list < 1? < 0.1?
> 
> By home-brewers I mean amateurs developing for their own use.
> 
> Home-brewers don't normally work cross-platform. Professional developers usually do, I suppose.
> 
> Is LC the preferred tool for non-pros developing for their own use? If not then what is?
> 
> Cheers,
> 
> Tim
> _______________________________________________
> use-livecode mailing list
> use-livecode at lists.runrev.com
> Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription preferences:
> http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-livecode





More information about the use-livecode mailing list