public
Description: Code as Art, Art as Code. Processing and Ruby are meant for each other.
Homepage: http://github.com/jashkenas/ruby-processing/wikis
Clone URL: git://github.com/jashkenas/ruby-processing.git
Search Repo:
ruby-processing / README
100644 141 lines (101 sloc) 5.66 kb
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
 ____ _ ____ _
| _ \ _ _| |__ _ _ | _ \ _ __ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___(_)_ __ __ _
| |_) | | | | '_ \| | | |_____| |_) | '__/ _ \ / __/ _ \/ __/ __| | '_ \ / _` |
| _ <| |_| | |_) | |_| |_____| __/| | | (_) | (_| __/\__ \__ \ | | | | (_| |
|_| \_\\__,_|_.__/ \__, | |_| |_| \___/ \___\___||___/___/_|_| |_|\__, |
                   |___/ |___/
 
 
This is a Ruby wrapper that lets you harness Processing’s awesome power.
It makes Processing act in a slightly more Shoes-like way, and replaces
the ol’ crusty faux-Java-1.4-syntax sandals that Processing usually
wears with some new Ruby slippers.
 
From inside this folder, you can run the samples like so:
 
script/open samples/jwishy.rb
 
Because it’s Ruby, you can also load the samples via script/live, and then alter
them on the fly. Live coding, anyone?
 
For full, up-to-date info, always check the wiki:
http://github.com/jashkenas/ruby-processing/wikis
 
 
Changelog:
 
Revision 0.9
  * Inspired by NodeBox, Ruby-Processing now sports the ability
    to have sliders control numeric variables in your sketches.
    If you're using an instance variable, say, @speed, to control
    the speed of your sketch.
    
    has_slider :speed
    
    Will bring up a panel alongside with a slider that controls
    the speed. It can take a range of values as an optional parameter.
    Check out and run jwishy.rb for an example.
  
  * Multi-platform app export! Exporting your Ruby-Processing
    apps will now create executable apps for Mac/Windows/Linux.
    
  * Live coding support. Now you can do script/live path/to/sketch.rb
    to open up an interactive session with your sketch available
    as @app.
    
  * Nick Sieger donated an additional sample.
 
Revision 0.8
  * Ruby-Processing can now export Mac applications! Running
    script/application my_sketch.rb will create MySketch.app,
    complete with all of its data and libraries. If you have
    a .icns file inside of your data folder, it will become
    the app's icon.
    
  * Added a mathematical Fern sample. It's a port of Luis
    Correia's java original, with algorithms from Wikipedia.
    
  * Sketches now have a library_loaded? method, so that you can
    check if a library has been started successfully, and
    conditionally enable things. (Good for OpenGL.)
    
  * The Boids library is now about 40% faster. It also comes with
    an example in library/boids/samples.
    
  * Specs have been started both for exporting and for Ruby-
    Processing itself.
 
Revision 0.7
  * Thanks to MenTaLguY, once again, for work on the JRubyApplet, OpenGL
    is now a first-class citizen. If you're using OpenGL in your sketch,
    the applet exporter should just work. It has also been moved and
    renamed, so now you can use it like:
    
    script/applet my_sketch.rb
  
  * An app generator has been added for getting started. It'll give you
    a template for an empty Ruby-Processing sketch, with setup and draw
    methods and all that. Usage:
    
    script/generate my_sketch 800 600
    
    Will create a file called my_sketch.rb, with a title of "My Sketch",
    800 pixels wide and 600 pixels tall. Width and height are optional.
    
  * Ruby-Processing now includes its first pure-Ruby library, a port
    of Tom de Smedt's "Boids", for algorithmic flocking.
 
Revision 0.6
  * Now we're baking up some applet pie. The applet_tree script will
    take your Ruby-Processing sketch, export it as an applet, and
    generate an HTML page for you to post. It's way easier now than it
    would have been before. (thanks to MenTaLguY.) Use it like so:
    
    ./applet_tree my_sketch.rb
    
    But there are caveats: Applets don't work with native libraries, so
    no OpenGL. If you're requiring other files that aren't part of the
    standard Ruby distro, you'll need to include them as libraries, which
    means: Drop them in a folder inside of "library". Use
    load_ruby_library("folder_name") or load_java_library() to load 'em.
    These methods replace the previous load_library(). Ruby libs will
    load the .rb with the same name as the folder. Java libs will just
    load up all of the .jars in the folder.
    
    Demos — all of the standard samples are available as applets:
    http://fiercefrontiers.com/applets/jwishy/
    http://fiercefrontiers.com/applets/tree/
    http://fiercefrontiers.com/applets/circle_collision/
    http://fiercefrontiers.com/applets/reflection/
    
 
Revision 0.5
  * Ruby-Processing gets easy native library support. Now you can take
    Processing libraries, drop them in the library folder, and load them
    up like so (inside your sketch):
    
    load_library "opengl"
    
    It works by loading up all of the .jars in that folder, and setting
    the java.library.path to that folder, so that the native extensions
    can be found.
    
  * Full Screen OpenGL demo added, but you'll need to copy over the
    OpenGL library to use it.
 
Revision 0.4
  * Ruby-Processing goes fullscreen. Just pass :full_screen => true
    into the options when you’re starting up your app. Like so:
 
    MyApp.new(:title => "MyApp", :full_screen => true)
 
  * Because Processing has just so many methods, you can now search
    through them: find_method "method_name"
 
Revision 0.3
  * Processing::App.current will give you a handle on the app. (Useful
    in jirb).
  * samples/jwishy.rb has some new hooks for live coding.
  * circle_collision and tree samples added (Joe Holt)