Awesome
Vedeu
Vedeu (vee-dee-you; aka VDU) is my attempt at creating a terminal based application framework without the need for Ncurses. I've tried to make Vedeu as simple and flexible as possible.
Requirements
- Ruby (see .ruby-version for current version)
- Linux/MacOSX
Note: You may have trouble running Vedeu with Windows installations. (Pull requests welcome!)
Dependencies
Vedeu relies on the following gems, these will be automatically installed when you install Vedeu (as documented below).
- bundler
- rake
- vedeu_cli
- thor
Installation
To install Vedeu, simply:
gem install vedeu
To use Vedeu's application scaffolding, see the RubyDoc
Example
Have a look at: Playa. Please browse the source of Playa and Vedeu to get a feel for how it all works.
Note: Playa is based on an old version of Vedeu. Vedeu has significantly improved since then and a better example is coming soon!
If you have produced software which uses Vedeu, please let me know, I'll link to your project here.
Documentation & Usage
Vedeu is documented using Yard. I hope to produce more 'General Usage' documentation shortly. In the meantime, please browse the RubyDoc. Finally, here is some documentation for the various aspects of Vedeu (not comprehensive):
- The Vedeu API
- Borders
- Buffers
- Cell
- Chars
- Colours & Styles
- Configuration
- Cursors
- The Vedeu DSL
- Events
- Geometry
- Getting Started
- Groups
- Input
- Interfaces
- Keymaps
- Lines
- Object Graphs
- Output
- Streams
- Template
- Views
There are also some small, simple applications in the examples/ directory to show some concepts and basic functionality. This is not exhaustive, but are being added to and improved fairly regularly.
Development / Contributing
Pull requests are very welcome! Please try to follow these simple rules if applicable:
- Please create a topic branch for every separate change you make.
- Make sure your patches are well tested.
- Update the Yard documentation.
(Use
yard stats --list-undoc
to locate undocumented code) - Update the README, if appropriate.
- Please do not change the version number.
Raising issues and finding bugs, updating documentation and improving the code are all welcome contributions. I may also have left some TODO items lying around, which you're quite welcome to and can find with either Yard, or git:
yard list --query '@todo'
git grep --line-number '@todo'
Any branch on the repository that is not master
is probably experimental; do
not rely on anything in these branches. Typically, twerks
will be merged
into master
before a release, and branches prefixed with spike/
are me
playing with ideas- they aren't guaranteed to work at all.
Various environment variables are available to you to help with testing, all of
which can be used in combination, prefaced to rake
:
-
Produce statistics on the slowest performing parts of the application/tests. Useful when used multiple times. See
test/test_helper.rb
for configuration.PERFORMANCE=1 rake
-
Produce a 'SimpleCov' test coverage report in the
coverage/
directory.SIMPLECOV=1 rake
-
Produces a 'SimpleCov' test coverage report with output to the console.
CONSOLE_COVERAGE=1 rake
-
Enable Ruby's warnings mode (this can usually be quote verbose, but thankfully more so with gem dependencies rather than Vedeu itself).
WARNINGS=1 rake
-
Disable Ruby's garbage collection for this test run.
DISABLE_GC=1 rake
-
Use Rubocop to catch coding misdemeanours for this test run. (Or use
rake rubocop
).RUBOCOP=1 rake
-
Build the Yard documentation for the project. (Or use
rake yard
).YARD=1 rake
General contribution help
- Fork it (https://github.com/gavinlaking/vedeu/fork)
- Clone it
- Run
bundle
- Run
rake
(runs all tests and coverage report) orbundle exec guard
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Write some tests, write some code, have some fun!
- Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create a new pull request.