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JRubyFX

JRubyFX is a pure ruby wrapper for JavaFX 2.2+ with FXML support. Currently supported: Java 8+, JRuby 9.3+.

Status

JRubyFX master should be usable in its current form and able to run most FXML apps. As of JRubyFX 2.0, the Java FXML Loader is used. This requires JRuby 9.3+. Please see the JRubyFX github wiki for upgrading from 1.x.

Install

For JRuby 9.3.4+:

gem install jrubyfx

For older JRuby versions:

gem install jrubyfx -v 1.2

If you are using Java 9+, additionally append the contents of module-opens.txt to bin/.jruby.java_opts in your jruby install. If you fail to do this, you may get inscruitable "method X not found, did you mean X?" errors.

Manual Build and Install

Build is done using rake/gem/bundler/rdoc. You need JRuby >= 9.3.4.0, Java >= 8 with JavaFX 11 modules installed (only required for reflect task). Building native application packages requires JDK 8+.

rake install

Once the gem is installed, just run a ruby file that uses it normally.

NOTE: If you don't have JRuby installed as the ruby command, use jruby -S rake instead of rake. If you are using RVM, this does not apply to you (though make sure you rvm use jruby).

If you are reporting bugs or encountering fxml issues: please ensure you are using JRubyFX 2.0. Prior version relied on a ported fxml parser and had many known issues.

Updating the Imports

JRubyFX currently uses the 11-based classes for the default imports (part_imports.rb). In the future, this list may change. See gen_tree.rb for a script to help automate finding the classes to import.

Creating a Jar

If you want to distribute your application, you can create a jar with embedded JRuby. Place all your sources in a folder, and run (replacing paths as appropriate):

jrubyfx-jarify samples/fxml/ --main samples/fxml/Demo.rb Demo.jar

This jar can then run anywhere there is a JVM with JavaFX. Note than the main file is renamed to jar-bootstrap.rb inside the jar. If you need to detect if you are in a jar, use the JRubyFX::Application.in_jar? method.

You can create native application packages and installers. For now, this requires that you have JDK8 installed, although this may change in the near future. Just pass the --native option. The packaging toolkit can only create packages for the OS it is being used on, so for Windows installers you will need to run it on a Windows machine, for OSX installers you will need to run it on a Mac, etc.

In order for the installer to be created, you will need some additional tools installed on your system. For Windows you need either Inno Setup 5 or later for an EXE or Windows Installer XML (WiX) toolset to generate an MSI. Make sure the WiX toolset's bin folder is on the PATH. No special tools are need to generate a DMG, just a recent version of OSX. For linux, the packager uses dpkg-deb to create DEB installers and rpmbuild for RPM.

If you don't want your application to be called "JarBootstrapMain", I highly suggest passing the --name option with an appropriate string.

To customize the package, for example to change the icons or license pass the -v or --verbose option. This will cause the JavaFX packaging tools to enter verbose mode, and provide more details about the process, including (the important part for customization) the location of a temporary folder where the config resources for the build are held and a list of the resources and the role of each. Copy the contents of this tmp folder into a folder in your project directory (the dir you run jrubyfx-jarify from) where the packaging tools will know to look for them. For example, on linux this would be main_project_dir/package/linux. On OSX, it is main_project_dir/package/macosx. So, if I wanted to use a custom icon, I'd replace the default icon with my own, ensuring it has the same name, and place it inside that linux or macosx folder. Then run the build again. You can find more information on customizing at the official Oracle documentation. This blog post may also be helpful, as he goes through the process of customizing an app for both Windows and OSX.

The JavaFX tools provide far more options than are available from this tool. You can create your own rake tasks and access them directly, however. See this article in the JRuby wiki.

Example: If my project directory is Hello, all my files are in src, I have a dist folder created for my jar file, my main file is called HelloWorldApp.rb, my app's name is "Hello World App", and I want the customization info, the command line would look like this:

jrubyfx-jarify src --main src/HelloWorldApp.rb dist/HelloWorldApp.jar --native --name "Hello World App" -v

Also note that you can do this in code, see samples/fxml/Demo.rb for the rake task usage.

Samples

To run sample:

jruby samples/fxml/Demo.rb

Or, if you have not installed the gem, or are testing edits to jrubyfx.rb:

rake run main_script=samples/fxml/Demo.rb

To run all samples (a nice quick way to make sure you didn't break anything), run:

jruby -I lib samples/test_all_the_samples.rb

Several other files that can be used as examples are in the tests/ folder

Creating Application and Controller

Require the 'jrubyfx' file/gem, and subclass JRubyFX::Application (and JRubyFX::Controller if you are using FXML). At the bottom of the file, call yourFXApplicationClass.launch(). Override start(stage) in the application. See samples/fxml/Demo.rb for commented FXML example, or the fils in samples/javafx for non-FXML (programatic JavaFX, but you should really look into FXML, its better) or see the Getting Started Guide and the Syntax Notes on the JRubyFX github wiki

If you want rdoc, run rake rdoc. Please note that there are lots of generated methods and conventions that are not in the RDoc. Please read the Getting Started Guide or the tutorials.

Issues

Contact

Find us in #jruby on matrix.

License

Main code is Apache 2.0. See LICENSE. Some samples in contrib may have other licenses.

Authors