Sebastian Sastre 06073a81c9 lists reacting to #onItemDoubleClicked:on: | 10 years ago | |
---|---|---|
resources | 10 years ago | |
src | 10 years ago | |
.gitignore | 10 years ago | |
Gruntfile.js | 10 years ago | |
LICENSE-MIT | 10 years ago | |
README.md | 10 years ago | |
app.js | 10 years ago | |
bootstrap2.3.2.amd.json | 10 years ago | |
bower.json | 10 years ago | |
codemirror.amd.json | 10 years ago | |
index.html | 10 years ago | |
index.js | 10 years ago | |
jquery-ui.amd.json | 10 years ago | |
jquery.amd.json | 10 years ago | |
local.amd.json | 10 years ago | |
package.json | 10 years ago | |
requirejs.amd.json | 10 years ago | |
showdown.amd.json | 10 years ago |
Helios IDE for Amber Smalltalk
There are two ways how to contribute. In both way you need to fork this repo first.
First way is by cloning your fork and setting it up (have node
and npm
installed,
have bower
, grunt-cli
and amber-cli
npm packages installed globally,
then run npm install
and bower install
in the project directory,
after what you can go the classical Amber project way of running amber serve
from CLI
and go to http://localhost:4000/
in the browser). This way you can only contribute
to Helios itself.
As Helios is still coupled with Amber, you need occasionally make change to Amber itself,
not just to Helios code. Thus, recommended way is to fork and clone Amber repository itself
for development (see https://github.com/amber-smalltalk/amber/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md,
"Setup your Amber clone" part and use your own fork in the "clone Helios" step).
This allows you to develop Amber itself, amber-cli
and Helios at once.