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- Smalltalk current createPackage: 'Documentation' properties: #{}!
- Object subclass: #ChapterSelectionAnnouncement
- instanceVariableNames: 'id'
- package: 'Documentation'!
- !ChapterSelectionAnnouncement methodsFor: 'accessing'!
- id
- ^id
- !
- id: aString
- id := aString
- ! !
- Object subclass: #ClassSelectionAnnouncement
- instanceVariableNames: 'theClass'
- package: 'Documentation'!
- !ClassSelectionAnnouncement methodsFor: 'accessing'!
- theClass
- ^theClass
- !
- theClass: aClass
- theClass := aClass
- ! !
- !ClassSelectionAnnouncement class methodsFor: 'instance creation'!
- on: aClass
- ^self new
- theClass: aClass;
- yourself
- ! !
- Widget subclass: #DocChapter
- instanceVariableNames: 'title contents parent level'
- package: 'Documentation'!
- !DocChapter methodsFor: 'accessing'!
- announcer
- ^DocumentationBuilder current announcer
- !
- chapters
- "A doc chapter can contain sub chapters"
- ^#()
- !
- contents
- ^contents ifNil: ['']
- !
- contents: aString
- contents := aString
- !
- cssClass
- ^'doc_chapter'
- !
- htmlContents
- ^(Showdown at: #converter) new makeHtml: self contents
- !
- id
- "The id is used in url fragments.
- It must be unique amoung all chapters"
- ^self title replace: ' ' with: '-'
- !
- level
- ^self parent ifNil: [1] ifNotNil: [self parent level +1]
- !
- level: anInteger
- level := anInteger
- !
- parent
- ^parent
- !
- parent: aChapter
- parent := aChapter
- !
- title
- ^title ifNil: ['']
- !
- title: aString
- title := aString
- ! !
- !DocChapter methodsFor: 'actions'!
- displayChapter: aChapter
- DocumentationBuilder current widget displayChapter: aChapter
- !
- selectChapter: aChapter
- document location hash: aChapter id
- !
- selectClass: aClass
- DocumentationBuilder current announcer announce: (ClassSelectionAnnouncement on: aClass)
- ! !
- !DocChapter methodsFor: 'initialization'!
- initialize
- super initialize.
- self subscribe
- ! !
- !DocChapter methodsFor: 'rendering'!
- renderDocOn: html
- | div |
- html h1 with: self title.
- self renderNavigationOn: html.
- div := html div class: 'contents'.
- div asJQuery html: self htmlContents
- !
- renderLinksOn: html
- html ul
- class: 'links';
- with: [
- self chapters do: [:each |
- html li with: [
- html a
- with: each title;
- onClick: [self selectChapter: each]]]]
- !
- renderNavigationOn: html
- self parent ifNotNil: [
- html div
- class: 'navigation'; with: [
- html a
- with: '← back to ', self parent title;
- onClick: [self selectChapter: self parent]]]
- !
- renderOn: html
- html div
- class: self cssClass;
- with: [
- self renderDocOn: html.
- self renderLinksOn: html]
- ! !
- !DocChapter methodsFor: 'subscriptions'!
- subscribe
- self announcer on: ChapterSelectionAnnouncement do: [:ann |
- ann id = self id ifTrue: [self displayChapter: self]]
- ! !
- DocChapter subclass: #ClassDocChapter
- instanceVariableNames: 'theClass'
- package: 'Documentation'!
- !ClassDocChapter methodsFor: 'accessing'!
- contents
- ^self theClass comment isEmpty
- ifTrue: [self theClass name, ' is not documented yet.']
- ifFalse: [self theClass comment]
- !
- cssClass
- ^'doc_class ', super cssClass
- !
- initializeWithClass: aClass
- theClass := aClass
- !
- theClass
- ^theClass
- !
- title
- ^self theClass name
- ! !
- !ClassDocChapter methodsFor: 'rendering'!
- renderLinksOn: html
- html ul
- class: 'links';
- with: [
- html li with: [html a
- with: 'Browse this class';
- onClick: [Browser openOn: self theClass]]]
- ! !
- !ClassDocChapter methodsFor: 'subscriptions'!
- subscribe
- super subscribe.
- self announcer
- on: ClassSelectionAnnouncement do: [:ann |
- ann theClass = self theClass ifTrue: [
- self selectChapter: self]]
- ! !
- !ClassDocChapter class methodsFor: 'accessing'!
- on: aClass
- ^self basicNew
- initializeWithClass: aClass;
- initialize;
- yourself
- ! !
- DocChapter subclass: #ClassesIndexChapter
- instanceVariableNames: ''
- package: 'Documentation'!
- !ClassesIndexChapter methodsFor: 'accessing'!
- alphabet
- ^'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ'
- !
- cssClass
- ^'index_doc ', super cssClass
- !
- title
- ^'Smalltalk classes by index'
- ! !
- !ClassesIndexChapter methodsFor: 'rendering'!
- renderDocOn: html
- html h1 with: self title.
- self alphabet do: [:letter || classes |
- classes := Smalltalk current classes select: [:each | each name first = letter].
- classes ifNotEmpty: [html h2 with: letter].
- html ul with: [
- (classes sorted: [:a :b | a name < b name])
- do: [:each |
- html li with: [html a
- with: each name;
- onClick: [self selectClass: each]]]]]
- ! !
- DocChapter subclass: #PackageDocChapter
- instanceVariableNames: 'package chapters'
- package: 'Documentation'!
- !PackageDocChapter methodsFor: 'accessing'!
- chapters
- ^chapters
- !
- contents
- ^'Classes in package ', self package name, ':'
- !
- package
- ^package
- !
- title
- ^'Package ', self package name
- ! !
- !PackageDocChapter methodsFor: 'initialization'!
- initializeWithPackage: aPackage
- package := aPackage.
- chapters := (aPackage classes sorted: [:a :b | a name < b name]) collect: [:each |
- (ClassDocChapter on: each)
- parent: self;
- yourself]
- ! !
- !PackageDocChapter class methodsFor: 'instance creation'!
- on: aPackage
- ^self basicNew
- initializeWithPackage: aPackage;
- initialize;
- yourself
- ! !
- DocChapter subclass: #TutorialsChapter
- instanceVariableNames: ''
- package: 'Documentation'!
- !TutorialsChapter methodsFor: 'accessing'!
- contents
- ^'You can find a list of [Tutorials](https://github.com/amber-smalltalk/amber/wiki/Tutorials) on the [Github wiki](https://github.com/amber-smalltalk/amber/wiki). If you are new to Smalltalk, you can also learn Amber online with [ProfStef](http://www.amber-lang.net/learn.html).'
- !
- title
- ^'Tutorials'
- ! !
- Object subclass: #DocumentationBuilder
- instanceVariableNames: 'chapters announcer widget'
- package: 'Documentation'!
- !DocumentationBuilder methodsFor: 'accessing'!
- announcer
- ^announcer ifNil: [announcer := Announcer new]
- !
- chapters
- ^chapters ifNil: [chapters := self buildChapters]
- !
- widget
- ^widget ifNil: [widget := DocumentationWidget on: self]
- ! !
- !DocumentationBuilder methodsFor: 'building'!
- build
- self buildOnJQuery: ('body' asJQuery)
- !
- buildChapters
- ^((self class methodDictionary values sorted: [:a :b | a selector < b selector])
- select: [:each | each category = 'chapters'])
- collect: [:each | self perform: each selector]
- !
- buildOn: aCanvas
- aCanvas with: self widget.
- self
- checkHashChange;
- checkHash
- !
- buildOnJQuery: aJQuery
- self buildOn: (HTMLCanvas onJQuery: aJQuery)
- ! !
- !DocumentationBuilder methodsFor: 'chapters'!
- ch1introduction
- ^DocChapter new
- title: 'Introduction';
- contents: '
- ##Amber Smalltalk in a nutshell
- Amber is an implementation of the Smalltalk-80 language. It is designed to make client-side web development **faster, easier and more fun** as it allows developers to write HTML5 applications in a live Smalltalk environment!!
- Amber is written in itself, including the IDE and the compiler and it runs **directly inside your browser**. The IDE is fairly complete with a class browser, workspace, transcript, unit test runner, object inspectors, cross reference tools and even a debugger.
- Noteworthy features:
- - Amber is semantically and syntactically very close to [Pharo Smalltalk](http://www.pharo-project.org). Pharo is considered the reference implementation.
- - Amber **seamlessly interacts with JavaScript** and can use its full eco system of libraries without any glue code needed.
- - Amber **has no dependencies** and can be used in any JavaScript runtime, not only inside browsers. An important example is [Node.js](http://nodejs.org).
- - Amber is a live Smalltalk that **compiles incrementally into efficient JavaScript** often mapping one-to-one with JavaScript equivalents.
- - Amber has a **Seaside influenced canvas library** to dynamically generate HTML.
- ## Why Amber?
- - JavaScript is quite a broken language with lots of traps and odd quirks. It is the assembler of the Internet which is cool, but we don''t want to write in it.
- - Amber is a language and environment built for the web. With Amber, client-side web development finally gets the power and productivity that exists in other Smalltalk dialects.
- - Smalltalk has a simple class model with a lightweight syntax for closures, it is in many ways a perfect match for the Good Parts of JavaScript.
- Smalltalk stands head and shoulders above most other languages for clarity, conciseness, and human-friendliness.
- As a language, it is immensely clean and mature, both syntactically and semantically. It is a pure OO language, with objects all the way down.
- - Having a true live & incremental development environment where you can build your application interactively in the browser is unbeatable.
- ## Disclaimer
- This documentation doesn''t aim to teach Smalltalk.
- Knowledge of Smalltalk is needed to understand the topics covered in this documentation.
- If you want to learn the Smalltalk language, you can read the excellent [Pharo By Example](http://www.pharobyexample.org) book.
- '
- !
- ch2differencesWithOtherSmalltalks
- ^DocChapter new
- title: 'Differences with other Smalltalks';
- contents: '
- Amber has some differences with other Smalltalk implementations. This makes porting code a non-trivial thing, but still quite manageable.
- Because it maps Smalltalk constructs one-to-one with the JavaScript equivalent, including Smalltalk classes to JavaScript constructors, the core class library is simplified compared to Pharo Smalltalk.
- And since we want Amber to be useful in building lean browser apps we can''t let it bloat too much.
- But apart from missing things other Smalltalks may have, there are also things that are plain different:
- - The collection class hierarchy is much simpler compared to most Smalltalk implementations. In part this is because we want to map reasonably well with JavaScript counter parts.
- - As of today, there is no SortedCollection. The size of arrays is dynamic, and they behave like an ordered collection. They can also be sorted with the `#sort*` methods.
- - The `Date` class behaves like the `Date` and `TimeStamp` classes in Pharo Smalltalk. Therefore both `Date today` and `Date now` are valid in Amber.
- - Amber does not have class Character, but `String` does implement some of Character behavior so a single character String can work as a Character.
- - Amber does support **class instance variables**, but not class variables.
- - Amber only has global classes and packages, but not arbitrary objects. Use classes instead like `Smalltalk current` instead of `Smalltalk` etc.
- - Amber does not support pool dictionaries.
- - Amber uses **< ...javascript code... >** to inline JavaScript code and does not have pragmas.
- - Amber does not have class categories. The left side in the browser lists real Packages, but they feel much the same.
- '
- !
- ch3GettingStarted
- ^DocChapter new
- title: 'Getting started';
- contents: '
- To get started hacking in Amber you can basically take three routes, independent of your platform:
- 1. Just **try it out directly** at [www.amber-lang.net](http://www.amber-lang.net) - click the **Class browser** button there. But you will **not be able to save any code you write**!!
- Still, it works fine for looking at the IDE and playing around. Just **don''t press F5/reload** - it will lose any code you have written.
- 2. Download an Amber zip-ball, install [Nodejs](http://www.nodejs.org), fire up the Amber server and then open Amber from localhost - then you **can save code**. Detailed instructions are below!!
- 3. Same as above but install git first and get a proper clone from [http://github.com/NicolasPetton/amber](http://github.com/NicolasPetton/amber) instead of a zip/tar-ball.
- If you want to **contribute to Amber itself** this is really what you want to do. In fact, in most cases this is what you want to do. It requires installing git first, but it is quite simple - although we leave this bit as an "exercise to the reader" :)
- ## Downloading Amber
- Currently you can download in zip or tar-ball format, either cutting edge or a release. [Downloads are available here](https://github.com/NicolasPetton/amber/archives/amber).
- Unpack wherever you like, but I would rename the directory that is unpacked to something slightly shorter - like say "amber". :)
- And yes, at this point you can double click the index.html file in the amber directory to get the IDE up, but again, **you will not be able to save code**. So please continue below :)
- ## Installing Node.js
- [Node](http://www.nodejs.org) (for short) is simply the V8 Javascript VM from Google (used in Chrome) hooked together with some hard core C-libraries for doing "evented I/O".
- Basically it''s JavaScript for the server - on asynch steroids. Amber runs fine in Node and we use it for several Amber tools, like amberc (the command line Amber compiler) or the Amber server (see below).
- There are also several Amber-Node examples to look at if you want to play with running Amber programs server side. **In short - you really want to install Nodejs. :)**
- - Installing Node on Linux can be done using your package tool of choice (`apt-get install nodejs` for example) or any other way described at [the download page](http://nodejs.org/#download).
- - Installing Node on MacOS or Windows is probably done best by using the [installers available at Nodejs.org](http://nodejs.org/#download).
- ## Starting Amber server
- Nicolas has written a minimal webDAV server that is the easiest way to get up and running Amber with the ability to save code. This little server is written in... Amber!!
- And it runs on top of Node. So to start it up serving your brand new directory tree of sweet Amber you do:
- cd amber (or whatever you called the directory you unpackaged)
- ./bin/server (in windows you type `node server\server.js` instead)
- It should say it is listening on port 4000. If it does, hooray!! That means both Node and Amber are good. In Windows you might get a question about opening that port in the local firewall - yep, do it!!
- ## Firing up Amber
- The Amber IDE is written in... Amber. It uses [jQuery](http://jquery.com) and runs right in your browser as a ... well, a web page.
- We could open it up just using a file url - but the reason we performed the previous steps is so that we can load the IDE web page from a server that can handle PUTs (webDAV) of source code.
- According to web security Amber can only do PUT back to the same server it was loaded from. Thus we instead want to open it [through our little server now listening on port 4000](http://localhost:4000/index.html).
- Clicking that link and then pressing the **Class browser** should get your Amber IDE running with the ability to commit modified packages locally.
- To verify that you can indeed commit now - just select a Package in the browser, like say "Examples" and press the **Commit** button below. **If all goes well nothing happens :)**.
- So in order to really know if it worked we can check the modified date on the files **amber/st/Examples.st**, **amber/js/Examples.js** and **amber/js/Examples.deploy.js** - they should be brand new.
- NOTE: We can use any webDAV server and Apache2 has been used earlier and works fine. But the Amber server is smaller and simpler to start.
- '
- !
- ch4Tutorials
- ^TutorialsChapter new
- !
- ch5Index
- ^ClassesIndexChapter new
- !
- ch6KernelObjects
- ^PackageDocChapter on: (Package named: 'Kernel-Objects')
- !
- ch7KernelClasses
- ^PackageDocChapter on: (Package named: 'Kernel-Classes')
- !
- ch8KernelCollection
- ^PackageDocChapter on: (Package named: 'Kernel-Collections')
- !
- ch9KernelMethods
- ^PackageDocChapter on: (Package named: 'Kernel-Methods')
- ! !
- !DocumentationBuilder methodsFor: 'routing'!
- checkHash
- | hash presentation |
- hash := document location hash replace: '^#' with: ''.
- self announcer announce: (ChapterSelectionAnnouncement new
- id: hash;
- yourself)
- !
- checkHashChange
- (window jQuery: window) bind: 'hashchange' do: [self checkHash]
- ! !
- !DocumentationBuilder methodsFor: 'updating'!
- update
- chapters := nil.
- announcer := nil.
- widget := nil.
- (window jQuery: '.documentation') remove.
- self build
- ! !
- DocumentationBuilder class instanceVariableNames: 'current'!
- !DocumentationBuilder class methodsFor: 'accessing'!
- current
- ^current ifNil: [current := self new]
- ! !
- !DocumentationBuilder class methodsFor: 'initialization'!
- initialize
- self current build
- ! !
- Widget subclass: #DocumentationWidget
- instanceVariableNames: 'builder selectedChapter chapterDiv'
- package: 'Documentation'!
- !DocumentationWidget methodsFor: 'accessing'!
- builder
- ^builder
- !
- builder: aDocumentationBuilder
- builder := aDocumentationBuilder
- !
- chapters
- ^self builder chapters
- !
- selectedChapter
- ^selectedChapter ifNil: [selectedChapter := self chapters first]
- !
- selectedChapter: aChapter
- ^selectedChapter := aChapter
- ! !
- !DocumentationWidget methodsFor: 'actions'!
- displayChapter: aChapter
- self selectedChapter: aChapter.
- self updateChapterDiv
- !
- selectChapter: aChapter
- document location hash: aChapter id
- ! !
- !DocumentationWidget methodsFor: 'rendering'!
- renderChapterMenu: aChapter on: html
- html a
- with: aChapter title;
- onClick: [
- self selectChapter: aChapter].
- html ol with: [
- aChapter chapters do: [:each |
- html li with: [
- self renderChapterMenu: each on: html]]]
- !
- renderMenuOn: html
- html div
- class: 'menu';
- with: [
- html ol with: [
- self chapters do: [:each |
- html li with: [
- self renderChapterMenu: each on: html]]]]
- !
- renderOn: html
- html div
- class: 'documentation';
- with: [
- self renderMenuOn: html.
- chapterDiv := html div.
- self updateChapterDiv]
- ! !
- !DocumentationWidget methodsFor: 'updating'!
- updateChapterDiv
- chapterDiv contents: [:html |
- html with: self selectedChapter]
- ! !
- !DocumentationWidget class methodsFor: 'instance creation'!
- on: aBuilder
- ^self new
- builder: aBuilder;
- yourself
- ! !
|