



Bill Harris of the MacApp Documentation Team led off with a demonstration of MacBrowse (née Mouser). Always a useful tool, it's even better in its latest incarnation. Among its new features is support for the creation and use of 411 documentation from application source. Its use of multiple windows is better organized, and the interface is generally a lot cleaner, more powerful, and more intuitive.
When Bill was done wowing the audience, Ed Navarrette took the floor to demonstrate the latest version of ViewEdit. Although there are not a lot of new features in the new version, its user interface is considerably better than it used to be (and it wasn't that bad to begin with). The drop-down dialog panels, particularly, may set a standard for us all to follow in years ahead. The new ViewEdit also supports the new 3.0-style 'view' resources, of course; it also supports Object Master's AppleEvents, and has a Run mode in which you can see how your views will work (a cross between the AppMaker & MacApp combination and NextStep's Interface Builder).
Mike Burbidge followed with a demonstration of SourceBug. In its latest version, it has absorbed many of the features of the MacApp Debugger. Unfortunately, it has absorbed many of the bugs, also; the demonstration was marred by a number of crashes. (Let he, whose code is bugless, cast the first aspersion.) The demonstration was followed by a general discussion of MacApp debugging, in which a number of people admitted the once-heretical belief that SADE was not so bad (in version 1.3, anyway). I'm not convinced; I say we burn 'em at the stake.
The topic for the meeting was "Third-Party Building Blocks," with Curtis Faith and Tom Cahill, both of Sierra Software Innovations (SSI). They discussed the factors that led them to write and market their third-party building block for MacApp, SuperTEView.
SuperTEView is a TTEView replacement for MacApp. It has a number of advantages over TTEView; the most important are that SuperTEView has no 32K text limitation (as does TTEView), and that it supports both tabs and full justification, which TTEView does not. These benefits exist because SuperTEView is based on DataPak Software's WP-Engine, which is a more complete word processing engine than is the Mac's TextEdit, on which TTEView is based. If you're writing a MacApp application that needs to do even moderate word processing (four pages or more), you should consider using SuperTEView.
The presentation focused on how SSI got into the building-block business, and what their plans are for the future. SSI is actively seeking experienced MacApp developers (who isn't?) to help them achieve their objectives. A surprisingly large portion of their presentation was devoted to the beauty of their corporate location (Incline Village, NV, on the slopes of Lake Tahoe), the low taxes, the potentially high salaries, and the affordable housing (well, compared to the Bay Area, anyway).
But they didn't spent the whole time recruiting, thank goodness. Curtis also discussed SSI's plans for Inside Out, a Macintosh-specific database engine. SSI acquired Inside Out from Shana Enterprises, its original developer, about a year ago. Since then, they've been positioning it (and improving it) to take on the 4GL database systems (4th Dimension, dBase, Omnis, etc.) head-to-head.
So how does this relate to MacApp? Not too much, anymore-but before TDocument was broken up in MacApp 3, it was very relevant. SSI's efforts to shoehorn Inside Out into MacApp 2, with its assumption of "one file per document," just about turned MacApp inside-out. Their difficulties-and the noise they made about them-were a significant contributing factor in why MacApp 3.0 no longer makes that assumption about documents. Using MacApp 3.0, it is so much easier to use Inside Out with MacApp, SSI has sold all its shoehorns, flooding the market, and depressing the shoehorn commodity prices worldwide.
Bamada meetings provide an exciting opportunity to meet the movers and shaker of the MacApp Community. If you already are a mover and a shaker, please come too, so everyone can meet you.
Be there or be tetrahedral!



