0.0.4 • Published 4 years ago

b8r-native-example v0.0.4

Weekly downloads
2
License
BSD-3-Clause
Repository
github
Last release
4 years ago

b8r-native

b8r-native in action

This is a stub for creating native desktop apps with bindinator using Electron or (eventually) NWJS.

Usage

Copy or clone this repo, and then:

npm install

To run the project in electron for debugging:

npm run start

Note that the file-browser example creates its own menu. You can still toggle dev tools using ctrl-shift-I (look inside the index.html file to see how that is implemented).

To build:

npm run dist

main.js

This is the entry point for electron. Most notably it sets up a custom protocol because b8r uses ESM (i.e. import vs. require) and Electron does not (currently) allow you to load javascript modules via the file: protocol.

Aside from that, all main.js really does is open a BrowserWindow with index.html in it.

index.html

The key thing this file does is import global CSS files, import b8r.js, and insert a single <b8r-component> tag to load the app's base component.

Two example components are provided, each is a simple self-contained application. Also see comments inside the file.

Other Stuff

There's a build folder with icon.png in it that you'll want to replace to change your icon.

electron-menu.js shows how to create native menus.

And, finally, customize about.html to give your application a custom "About Box".

File Browser Example

By default, the application created will be a simple file browser. This is a pretty extensive example since it makes use of the Electron and Node APIs, includes local libraries as well as stuff from the b8r package.

RAW Viewer Example

A simpler but perhaps more exciting example is the raw-viewer which you can check out by going into index.html and simply changing:

<b8r-component path="component/electron-file-browser"></b8r-component>

to:

<b8r-component path="component/raw-viewer"></b8r-component>

This (Mac-only) example makes extensive use of shell commands to find RAW image files using macOS's spotlight command line tool mdfind, extracts metadata using mdls, and generates thumbnails and full size views using the quicklook command line tool qlmanage.

It's not quite as fast as purely native applications like FastRAWViewer or RAWPower (both of which I use and recommend), but it's surprisingly good.