Amber [![Travis CI Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/amber-smalltalk/amber.png)](https://travis-ci.org/#!/amber-smalltalk/amber) ===== By Nicolas Petton and [Amber contributors](https://github.com/NicolasPetton/amber/contributors) Amber is an implementation of the Smalltalk language that runs on top of the JavaScript runtime. It is designed to make client-side development faster and easier. Overview -------- Amber is written in itself, including the parser and compiler. Amber compiles into efficient JavaScript, mapping one-to-one with the equivalent JavaScript. There is no interpretation at runtime. Some highlights: - Amber features an IDE with a Class browser, Workspace, Transcript, a ReferencesBrowser supporting senders/implementors and class references, basic Inspector and even a beginning of a Debugger and a unit TestRunner. - [Pharo Smalltalk](http://www.pharo-project.org) is considered as the reference implementation. - Amber includes a canvas to generate HTML, like [Seaside](http://www.seaside.st) - Amber can use Javascript libraries and the current IDE is built on [jQuery](http://www.jquery.com) - You can inline Javascript code and there are many ways to interact between Amber and Javascript Getting Amber ------------- Amber is shipped as a [npm](http://npmjs.org) package for its CLI tools and as a [bower](https://github.com/bower/bower) package for the client-side. # Install the CLI tool `amber` npm install -g amber # Load amber via bower in your project bower install amber # Serve amber on localhost:4000 amber serve Building Amber -------------- This step is only used by people developing Amber itself. Please refer to [CONTRIBUTING.md](CONTRIBUTING.md) for further details. It explains the Amber development setup and how to contribute. License ------- Amber is released under the MIT license. All contributions made for inclusion are considered to be under MIT. More infos ---------- More on the [project page](http://amber-lang.net)