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card_21528.txt
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-- card: 21528 from stack: in.0
-- bmap block id: 0
-- flags: 0000
-- background id: 3797
-- name:
-- part contents for background part 1
----- text -----
From: greely@teak.cis.ohio-state.edu (J Greely)
Date: 1 Mar 88 01:00:26 GMT
This discussion recalls to mind the question, "When is there going to
be a HyperCard book that tells you *everything* about how to _program_ HC?"
We've had Goodman's book, a weighty tome that was purchased because
there was nothing else on the market. It is oversized, incomplete,
and *very* poorly arranged (partially a function of its sheer volume).
Has anyone actually needed anything before page 341? Most of the
first half of the book is aimed at computer illiterates who don't know
how to point and click, and is concerned with such *vital* information
as how to use MacPaint-style tools.
I'm not saying that there aren't people who don't need this, but
most of them will be frightened away by the size of this thing (You
mean, I've got to read *all that* to understand HyperCard? Forget
it!), and those who aren't will get turned off long before they get to
the section on HyperTalk. Am I the only one who felt cheated by
purchasing a book that was effectively half-blank?
Moving on, we have a *new* book (which I haven't been able to find
yet), which is described as roughly equivalent to Goodman's, but
slightly more useful.
Then there's Apple's entry, available only from APDA. It has
information on XCMDs and XFCNs, but costs more (counting the
membership) than the others, and which I've yet to hear anything
really good about.
Is there, or will there be, a *real* book on HC? Written for
someone who knows the Mac, knows how to program, and couldn't care
less about learning to double-click? Accurate? Complete (unlike
Goodman's)? That is not a mindless rehash of the help stack? (which,
by the way, is almost useless. It has all this information about
HyperTalk, in a reasonable format, while the editor is a modal dialog
box. Useless!)
<sigh>I suppose it is to be expected that the machine-that-needs-no-
manual is incapable of producing a good one. I've been using the Mac
since it was released, and the only manuals I've ever needed were for
language products, for which you needed implementation information.
HyperCard is extremely easy to use, very well designed, and
(potentially) quite powerful. Why can't we have a manual that's the
same way?
-- part contents for background part 45
----- text -----
Re: HyperCard bug  <- No, it's a feature.