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Ah, the rumors of Mike's Cocoa column death are indeed premature. Mike has continued to meet his deadlines and provide us with solid tutorials.
I, on the other hand, the evil managing editor, have noticed a decline in traffic for our beloved Cocoa column. So, instead of running the articles every two weeks as before, I've slowed down the pace a bit.
But, I've also looked for ways to augment Mike's column with Cocoa-related content. And later this week you'll get a peek at what I mean.
On Friday, Nov. 30, not only are we going to run the next installment of Mike's column, but we're running a second article introducing F-Script, a terrific tool that makes Cocoa programming easier. I have three articles in that series that will run on the same days as Mike's columns.
I'm hoping that this approach will rekindle some of the original interest we had in the Cocoa series. Because between you and me, this is one of the most important developer topics related to Mac OS X.
Thanks for your comments, and we're here following what you have to say.
--Derrickk
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I hope that we will continue to have Mike's graphics story continue when he can. I thought he was just off for Thanksgiving and sort of tried to cover responses so we wouldn't all get lonely.
I hope the scripting promotes interapplication communication. I had hoped to get a foundation for supercomputer clusters by going through the objective c thinking. Maple kind of wanted me to do everything in Maple to advertise their "box". I need more to learn how to think "out of the box" and maybe even help build the "box". I got a c program to talk to a Maple program a few months back. The glory has faded from my memory.
I'll look forward to this F-script detour whatever it is (I can stand being curious) and to Mike getting back to the graphics tricks when his school life lets him.