[SEH] I wrote: 1. An improved replacement for [fileutil]::find 1. [TOXFile], a pure Tcl/Tk, cross-platform, drag/drop enabled, explorer-style file manager 1. [the FILTR], File Inventory for Loading, Transfer and Recovery 1. [A chroot virtual filesystem] 1. [An SSH virtual filesystem] 1. [A template virtual filesystem] 1. [A versioning virtual filesystem] 1. [tdelta], an rdiff-style file delta generator. 1. [A delta virtual filesystem] 1. [A collate/broadcast virtual filesystem] 1. [A quota-enforcing virtual filesystem] 1. [An LZW-compressing virtual filesystem] 1. pure-Tcl replacements for Tclx [keyed lists] commands 1. a wrapper and starkit for [sfm] 1. [stepsource.tcl] I started using Tcl when working for a Unix-only ERP software company. After spending two years becoming a bash ninja writing build and distribution scripts, management declared that we were moving to Windows. I decided, never again! Everything I wrote in Tcl ran everywhere, and I never looked back. The four-word case for Tcl: stability, portability, orthogonality, power. It's the worst possible tool if you're interested in persisting with the dominant crappy software development practices of the present day. In 2008 I was a participant with the Tcl Community in Google's Summer of Code. I mentored the [tcl-fuse] project. I am participating in 2009's GSoC as well; I am mentoring [The tcl-map GSoC2009 project]. I live in Chicago, IL, USA. Drop by! stephen.huntley@alum.mit.edu ---- [[ [Category Person] ]]