X-Git-Url: https://jasonwoof.com/gitweb/?p=peach-html5-editor.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=README.md;h=26edc34655851187c4de7d691f3598032fd9f265;hp=3d463de5e05271b78754ef2e86903112c74dc121;hb=e3b396215f59cd45b7d7c510dcddea8354f756aa;hpb=4cff8737a670f1aeb0236d18d41bceeab4407db5 diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index 3d463de..26edc34 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -1,25 +1,32 @@ -wheic -===== +Peach HTML5 Editor +================== -This project is to build a HTML5 parser, then use that to build a WYSIWYG html -editor for the browser. - -The code is written in CoffeeScript for modern browsers. The HTML5 parser can -also run under node.js. +This is a WYSIWYG HTML5 editor for the browser. Status ------ -HTML5 parser: all (1581) tests pass. Works in the browser and node.js +Early development stages. + +The HTML5 parser component passes the full test suite (1581 tests). + +The interface is starting to exist. + + +Technologies +------------ + +Programming language: CoffeeScript (compiles to javascript) + +Interface: Implemented using the DOM api. No ``contenteditable`` or jquery. -WYSIWYG editor: planning stages Quick Start Guide ----------------- -1. Open ``test.html`` in your browser. +1. Open ``parser_tests_coffee.html`` in your browser. 2. Open the console (right-click, inspect this element, console) @@ -28,7 +35,9 @@ Quick Start Guide 4. Try running the parser in the console, example: - window.wheic.parse_html("

foo

", {fragment: "body"}) + window.peach_parser.parse("

foo

", {fragment: "body"}) + +5. Open ``editor_tests_coffee.html`` in your browser For further reading, see "Running Under node.js" below. @@ -36,24 +45,55 @@ For further reading, see "Running Under node.js" below. Running Under node.js --------------------- -Dependancies: node.js, coffeescript +With node.js and Coffeescript, you can compile the coffeescript so you can use +the faster test pages, and you can test the html parser without a browser. + +Dependencies: node.js, CoffeeScript + +1. Install node.js https://nodejs.org/en/ + +2. Install CoffeeScript. Try: + + apt-get install coffeescript + or + + npm install -g coffee-script + +4. Compile to javascript: + + make + +Now you can do any of these things in any order: + +* Run the tests directly from CoffeeScript: + + coffee parser_tests.coffee + +* Test the compiled (javascript) parser in your favorite browser by opening + up ``parser_tests.html`` and looking at the console. -You can get CoffeeScript with a command such as this: +* Run tests via compiled code: - apt-get install coffeescript + nodejs parser_tests.js -or +* Try using the parser in your own javascript node.js project: - npm install -g coffee-script + var html5 = require('./parser.js'); + var dom = html5.parse("

hi

", {fragment: 'body'}); + ... -Now you can run the test suite like this: +* Try using the parser in your own CoffeeScript node.js project: - coffee test.coffee + html5 = require './parser.js' + dom = html5.parse "

hi

", fragment: 'body' + ... -Or use the parser from your own code: + Note: the CoffeeScript compile time is significant, so you'll want to use + the compiled javascript even though you could use the ``.coffee`` version. - wheic = require './parse-html.coffee' - dom = wheic.parse_html "foo bar" +* Hack editor.coffee more quickly, by testing in editor_tests.html which uses + the compiled version of the parser, thus speeding up load time + considerably. Feedback, Questions, Etc