I prefer interfacing with programming languages through a standard bash terminal. While Squeak and Pharo are well documented, they don't seem to have a CLI, just a VM GUI.
GNU Smalltalk and Slate have a normal CLI but no installers for Linux, Mac, or Windows--and they require a complicated MSYS configuration on Windows.
There seems to be no Smalltalk implementation that has both a CLI and multiplatform installers. I'd love to pick up this language, but I can't seem to find a Smalltalk that suits me.
Do Squeak and Pharo have secret CLI modes? Does anyone know where GST or Slate installers are posted? Are there other free, open source Smalltalks that have these two features?
learning
Smalltalk you should do it the right way. There is hardly anything to learn with the Smalltalk language. You can pick up that up in a few hours. The SmalltalkParadigm
, theTao
of Smalltalk is what you want to learn and that is done in the IDE, in fact itis
the object system and the IDE. If you want to learn from the CLI you can use the IDE to push keystrokes into a terminal, even Coral terminal as is suggested here. The management and organization of coding took a retrograde step Java,Python, Ruby etc.