A Python/Perl phrasebook By Jak Kirman (who passed away, according to the article where I found this link), and a modest STL tutorial, by same.
Month: June 2003
More Treeline
I do a lot of outlining in MS Word, and I sometimes play around with other outlining tools (Radio, SciTE). I sometimes wish for a tool that would let you structure a document as you work on it, in a flexible and freeform sort-of way, letting you switch from a hierarchic structure to a table (or back) and generally futz with the stuff you write to make it easy to navigate, organize and understand. Sometimes I contemplate writing something like that, or (better yet) finding it.
TreeLine is a small personal database program, built with Python and the Qt toolkit, that works nicely on Windows and Linux. It seems to fulfill all the infrastructure requirments for this hypothetical outliner-organizer I described above. It’s not what I’m looking for, though: too structured, forcing the user to think of the data model instead of letting him make it up as he goes along (and organizes and revised his thoughts). It’s nice, though, and would make a good basis for building what I want.
Writing Spreadsheets
Guidelines for Writing Spreadsheets, via MrExcel.com (who has a weblog of tips).
I still can’t make heads or tails of Excel myself… I’m more of a “let’s use tab-seperated-values, which is easier for Perl to parse”-person.
Hanan Cohen vs. Google
Hanan Cohen’s rant about Google (linked to by Dave Winer) complains that the Hebrew version of Google is broken, and gives an example from his site. Google’s response is swift: they fix the problem for Hanan’s site only (or so it seemed; Hanan shows in his comment that this is just a fluke) ( query, screenshot
)…