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# Object Oriented Code in the Gnus Newsreader
Eric Abrahamsen

The venerable Gnus newsreader has evolved over the years to interface
with many different types of news- or mail-like backend programs,
presenting all of them using a unified interface.  This sort of
software often calls for an object-oriented architecture, at least as
regards polymorphism, yet Gnus was written well before Emacs lisp
acquired the object-oriented tools and libraries – largely borrowed
from Common Lisp – that it boasts today.

Yet Gnus needed something "object-oriented-like", and so nnoo.el was
born: a rather amazing (and frankly terrifying) implementation of
object-oriented behavior using functional code.

This talk will be a brief introduction to how this existing system
works, and to the ongoing, incremental effort to port it over to newer
Elisp tools like generic functions, structs, and objects.

<!-- from the pad --->


# Questions


## Q3: Have you done any other projects using EIEIO and/or defstruct?


### "Right, EBDB is super deep into EIEIO, and was kind of written as a project for learning it, and the new gnus-search library is a more restrained usage.  The search engines are defclasses, and much of the code is shared, which works quite well."


## Q2: Is there may activity on maintenance of gnus today? (and is Lars involved/aware of this work?)


### "Yes, there's still development going on. I don't think Lars is very focused on Gnus right now, but I run all changes by him first.  He fixes bugs, but as far as I know, I'm the only one adding features right now, which is a terrifying thought."


## Q1: How much of this 90's funny code :) can be replaced and how much will have to stay forever?


### Eventually I think we can get most of it out of there. I was


### happy to be able to replace obarrays-as-hashtables with real


### hashtables, though that was a very painful process


# Notes


## Famous last words:  "Sometimes the only thing that's worse than not knowing why something doesn't work is not knowing why it does work."