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- From: jonwd@uwtc.washington.edu (Jon Wiederspan)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.hypercard
- Subject: SuperCard! (Was Re: HyperCard 3.0 info)
- Message-ID: <1iv0e1INN8em@shelley.u.washington.edu>
- Date: 12 Jan 93 17:50:57 GMT
- Article-I.D.: shelley.1iv0e1INN8em
- References: <1993Jan11.233604.3628@netcom.com>
- Distribution: world
- Organization: Technical Japanese Program
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- X-XXMessage-ID: <A778425D7C01CA3F@harajuku.tjp.washington.edu>
- X-XXDate: Tue, 12 Jan 93 17:39:41 GMT
-
- In article <1993Jan11.233604.3628@netcom.com> Brian Kendig,
- bskendig@netcom.com writes:
- > *sigh...* Maybe it's time to give SuperCard a serious look. How is
- > it, compatibility-wise and feature-wise?
-
- I've been using SuperCard for over two years and used HyperCard before
- that (since its first release). I've found SuperCard much more powerful
- and useful than HyperCard once I learned how to take advantage of the
- differences. The process of learning to use SuperCard is not as easy,
- though, and has turned off several HyperCard users.
- 1) SuperCard (SC) has two editing modes; SuperEdit and SuperCard. In
- SuperEdit you *only* edit the projects ("project" is the SC equivalent of
- stacks). SuperCard runs the project and provides you with many tools for
- runtime editing. Most HyperCard users seem to feel that SuperCard
- doesn't provide as much editing power as HyperCard (which is true) and
- are frustrated with having to switch back to SuperEdit for some changes.
- After using SuperCard for a while, I realized that I was actually
- building projects *faster* this way (than I did stacks) because I could
- rough out most of it in the editor and then fine tune in the runtime.
- Now I find HyperCard too limiting in terms of editing.
- 2) SuperCard has GREAT color capabilities. Every object has a
- foreground and background and line color and pattern. Thus, a field of
- text has a border color and pattern, foreground color and pattern,
- background color and pattern, and the text itself has its own color.
- These attributes are all adjustable from within scripts, so there was no
- problem when I wanted to make a 'traffic light'; a button that was green
- when on and red when off. SuperCard also lets you import other color
- lookup tables (clut) for specialized designs or picts. Unfortunately,
- these color capabilities have cost SuperCard some speed, so I would
- recommend at least a IIci and cache card (although I use just a IIsi and
- its not so bad -- but I'd love to have the IIci and card!).
- 3) SuperCard has a window for handling resources like XCMD, XFCN, snd,
- clut, ICON, and others. No need to use ResEdit to move resources!
- 4) SuperCard has the ability to make standalone modules for distribution
- and no license fees or royalties!
- 5) SuperCard can use almost all HyperCard XCMD/XFCN's. I've found a few
- that don't work well, but typically they aren't too stable in HyperCard
- either. SuperCard also contains a lot of features that are only
- available through XCMDs in HyperCard; most notable is the file open/close
- features.
- 6) I've run SuperCard on System 7.1 with WorldScript II and 32-bit on
- and no problems.
-
- There's probably more, but I haven't used HyperCard since 2.0, so many
- items I'm not sure if they are unique to SuperCard or not (list fields,
- balloon help?).
-
- Jon Wiederspan
- Software Consultant
- University of Washington
-