||| ||| | |||\ /| ||| ||___ \\__/ || \/ | || an artsy any-platform app kit forked form Shoes
Shoes is the best little DSL for cross-platform GUI programming there is. It feels like real Ruby, rather than just another C++ library wrapper. If Gtk or wxWidgets is Rails, Shoes is Sinatra.
Way way back in the day, there was a guy named _why. He created a project known as Hackety Hack to teach programming to everyone. In order to reach all corners of the earth, _why decided to make Hackety Hack work on Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux. This was a lot of work, and so _why decided to share his toolkit with the world. Thus, Shoes was born.
Everybody loved Shoes. Many apps were made, and put into The Shoebox. But, one day, _why left. In his memory, Team Shoes assembled, and carried on making Shoes. They released Shoes 3 in late summer 2010.
Here's a little Shoes app. It's a stopwatch!
Shoes.app :height => 150, :width => 250 do
background rgb(240, 250, 208)
stack :margin => 10 do
button "Start" do
@time = Time.now
@label.replace "Stop watch started at #@time"
end
button "Stop" do
@label.replace "Stopped, ", strong("#{Time.now - @time}"), " seconds elapsed."
end
@label = para "Press ", strong("start"), " to begin timing."
end
end
Here's what it looks like:
Pretty simple! For more samples, the manual, and a free book, check out the Shoes website.
If you'd like to use Shoes to develop some apps... awesome! It's super easy: Just go to the downloads page on the Shoes website and download a copy of Shoes for your platform. Mac OSX, Windows, and Linux supported!
After you install Shoes, run it! You'll get a window like this:
You can then open any .rb file with Shoes code inside by choosing "Open an App." It'll open it up and run it, right away.
Once you're happy with your app, you can choose "Package an App" to wrap up your app as a .exe, .app, or a .run. Then you can share it with someone without a pair of Shoes to call their own.
You can make your own pair of Shoes with a little bit of elbow grease. Since there are different instructions on each platform, we've got a page up on the Shoes development wiki about it. It's right here.
If you want to keep up to date with what's going on with Shoes, you can find us in various places:
- Official Shoes Site
- Source Code @ GitHub
- Issue tracker @ GitHub
- Mailing List (send an email to shoes@librelist.com to join)
- Twitter account
- Facebook page
- IRC room on Freenode, #shoes
So you'd like to lend a helping hand, eh? Great! We'd love to have you. To submit a patch to Shoes, just fork us, and send a pull request.
If you don't have any ideas yourself, take a look at the Issue tracker and see if anything strikes your fancy. If you need help working on something, don't be afraid to post to the mailing list about it!
Be sure to peer into the Shoes Wiki for instructions on how to get the source code to build, and to learn more knowledge that will come in handy if you want to help out!
If you're not a programmer, you can help Shoes by talking about it! Blog posts, tweets, tell your neighbors, call your grandma, whatever! Share Shoes with everyone!