Big Nerd Ranch: Day 4

Finally, I discussed my program with Aaron. Not as bad as I thought. Basically, he explained that I should have delegate of the NSTextView handle changes to NSAttributedString. How this may work is very confusing to me. I guess I’ll have to start pushing the bits. Hopefully this will be working out very well. Soon. If I just only…

Anyway class is winding down and my mind is basically full of Cocoa goodness. Full to the brim. Today we did some OpenGL and more CoreData. I hate both of these. OpenGLis just plain confusing, and CoreData has not too much programming. CoreData looks to be there version of CORBA.

There has been a lot to learn. Frameworks are always so hard to pick up because of the depth and breadth of them. I program in C++ without any crutch like a framework, but that is the way we are going. Away from the raw and onto something more plastic and man made. It takes real programmers to create a framework. OS X has plenty. Even though it’s summed up in Cocoa. there is a great deal to learn. Printing, graphics, sound, widgets. There’s a lot to it. Frameworks is the next thing. This is the first chance I have gotten with one. It’s been fun, but somewhat intimidating.

Also, staying here are a group of journalists taking a “Hostile environment” survival course. Most of the journalists are from CBC (Canada), CNN, NPR (?!) and are on there way to many hot spots of the world. We pass each other at meal times. They call us nerds. It’s funny. We almost had a rumble: they wanted to challenge us to a volleyball game. We may have done it if it was virtual volleyball, but the game neveer came to be. It was stupid. I think we just wanted there chicks. The one from CNN was kind of cute (on air personality I think name of Jace something?).

Turns out Aaron is also a fellow Cane. He was there for a couple of years left when I got there and stayed in the same residential colleg as me. Rather interesting.

Tomorrow we wind down. I really need to get things working on my program.

Sleep.

Big Nerd Ranch: Day 3

Hump day and the time here is getting short. We’ve so far covered another seven chapters in the book plus and additional CoreData chapter that Aaron has put together. A lot of it today being keyboard input, mouse events, and custom views. Unfortunately, my application is not coming along as I don’t have the heart to dive into the TextStorageLayer or discern the intricacies of NSTextContainers. I really wanted to learn the design of a GUI application, but I don’t feel that I have gotten it so far. Do you put objects in their proper place through code or through design? I feel that writing an application like the way we’ve been learning will result in a massive re-write or re-factoring for a 2.0 version. This is a mystery. I need it solved.

Also, on the daily hike, we enjoyed a nice dip in the river out back. We froliced in the shallows enjoying the cool cascade of water after the hike. On each daily hike the mass of Big Nerds has been dwindling. Today, with the announcement of a swim after the hike, we had a wholesale bailout of about a almost half of our numbers, and even then it was only six of us who braved the river. I like doing these things. Swimming in a local place is always much fun. It feels like I had been there. There are no pictures because the batteries of my camera died.

I have finished “Spin.” It has been a very good read. I hadn’t read science fiction in a long time, but this book is as thrilling as any of the classics. It was a Hugo Award finalist. I’ll lend it to you when I get back.

Sleep.

Big Nerd Ranch: Day 2

Another day. Another byte in the program. We’ve so far gone through another 5 chapters of Aaron’s book. Will we get to the finish in time? There are another 20 or so chapters left and I haven’t gotten to the last few during the time I tried his book. If we don’t, I think I will be somewhat disappointed.

My fellow classmates are an interesting bunch. They are a geekiness that I did not know existed. They are a more worldly geek. They know lots of differing programming paradigms, because they come from various industries and worked on many different projects throughout there work. But it is a beautiful sight to see all these Macs pounding out code.

My TiBook is the grandfather in the place. Besides the ancient cube running as a server and a few of the Big Nerd Ranch’s iMacs, everyone has a more recent Apple computer. Several Mac Book Pros are in the crowd. There rest are AlBooks. I even think that some of the iMacs are recent. Needless to say my compile time is definitely slower than the rest.

I did work on my project. It’s not going so well. I have read some of his code, but I am still stuck on the design of a GUI program. My first attempt at it I hated. This time I am starting from the data structures up. GUI and desktop applications are a strange beast. You seem to be constrained by the layouut and functionality inherent in your GUI. It is what it is and it drives how the program can work.

One of the reasons for a programming vacation was to learn more about GUI and desktop application design. I feel that I have not yet reached that point. I had broached that subject with Aaron and he did bring it up in class (“start with the windows”), but it all seems wrong. I am trained as a software engineer. I don’t think I can get the hang of this very well. Let’s see about today.

We’ve been introduced to CoreData. It’s rather neat. We first built up an application without CoreData. It used some bindings and NSArrayControllers but it took some time to code. The CoreData version started off with a model. Using ER notation we modeled the data of our application. Then we dragged and dropped our entity onto a window and voila, our application was done. Compile and link and it had the same functionality as our previous version.

We hiked in the woods again, but this time the humidity was down so it was not so bad. Again, I must complain about how out of shape I am. I feel this activity in my legs. Food was good today. Steak for dinner.

I am almost done reading “Spin.” I should’ve brought another book. I had one at home but feared that I wouldn’t get through this one. How wrong I was.

Sleep.

Big Nerd Ranch: Day 1

Up early for a vacation: 7:00 AM. I am so ready to do some programming. Breakfast was adequate. It’s sausage, eggs, bacon, grits and a biscuit. Is grits a southern thing. It’s not bad. It’s edible.

Then it’s off to start the programming. For those playing along, we did the first five chapters of Aaron’s Cocoa Programming book. I’ve already did it, but the code is on my mini at home, so I miss all my programming tricks to do. I like Cocoa. Anyway the class so far has been an introduction to Cocoa. It’s just what you can do with the tools and the framework. I have some experience.

I also asked Aaron about my application. He tells me it may be over my head. Whatever. How hard is programming? Not really hard. You just have to know how things are put together.

We also get food and lodging. The food so far is okay. Everything tastes good. The deserts though are awesome. I thought that I would lose some weight while I was here, but I am eating a lot and drinking plenty of soda. The accomodations are cool. It’s at Banning Mills, a restored paper mill. I keep thinking that there are ghosts around here. It gets dark in the room, and some noises creep me out. I wonder if the ghosts will ever come around.

We also went for a hike. I am out of shape as I felt it going up a hill. This summer’s bike riding will be brutal. Hopefully, when I get back, I’ll be training and lose these extra pounds.

“Spin” has been a fun read. I am almost half way through it.

Sleep.

Big Nerd Ranch: Day 0

Arrived in Atlanta around 3:00 pm. Watched the luggage carousel revolve for 20 minutes before my bag finally fell off the conveyor. Met the nerds around 5 minutes later. It’s just a bunch of guys, programmers and fellow Apple enthusiasts. After a ride in a rickety bus, we make it to the Historical Banning Mill. We mill about the place, eat dinner at 6:30, shoot some pool and go to back to our rooms around early. I end up reading my book, Robert Wilson’s “Spin.”

Sleep. Then onto several days of pure Cocoa pleasure.

Home again.

Just returned back from vacation. Will post the travel log later this week. And maybe pictures. My DirectTivo ain’t working. So tired. And the boat, she still a rocking.

Caribbean Cruise 2005: A break from work

Once every so often I do get a chance to go on a vacation. This time a cruise in the Caribbean. We’ll be hitting the Puerto Rico(? or the Bahamas not sure which), St. Thomas and St. Maartens. Maybe I will find that lost chick.

Alas, I am not planning on doing any real time blogging of the vacation, but instead, I will keep a journal and when I get back I will give it too you one a day. Just like the last cruise I was on.

Hope to see you, when I get back. But laterz for now.

European Vacation 2001: The wrap up entry.

I am using this entry to tie all the posts from our European vacation into one easy access point. Until I get Google on this site, this will be the only way to get to read all of my journal entries in one place.

  1. Prologue
  2. August 2, 2001
  3. August 3, 2001
  4. August 3, 2001, part 2
  5. August 4, 2001
  6. August 5, 2001
  7. August 6, 2001
  8. August 7, 2001
  9. August 8, 2001
  10. August 9, 2001
  11. August 10, 2001
  12. August 11, 2001
  13. August 11, 2001, part 2
  14. August 12, 2001
  15. August 13, 2001
  16. August 14, 2001
  17. August 15, 2001
  18. August 16, 2001

So give it a read. If it peeks your interest then drop a comment.

European Vacation 2001: Good-bye Iceland.

Aug. 16, 2001

07:40 Showered in sulfery water. Geothermal energy.

14:50 Done with Iceland. Blue Lagoon. Perfect end to the vacation. And the lunch wasn’t bad at all. Flight in an hour.

15:50 Sitting on floor. Waiting for the boarding shuffle. I get the seat w/either stinky Europeans or crazy Americans. Can’t wait to board.

21:35 Stuck between a bunch of French students. Pissing me off. When do we get home.

www.fold.is

This is the last entry for our European vacation of 2001. It was a blast. A cruise. Then decompression in Iceland. If you get the chance, I think you should check out the Scandinavian side of Europe. It will delight and entrance you.