By Nicolas Petton [email protected]
Jtalk is an implementation of the Smalltalk language that runs on top of the JavaScript runtime. It is designed to make client-side development faster and easier.
Jtalk is written in itself, including the parser and compiler. Jtalk compiles into efficient JavaScript, mapping one-to-one with the equivalent JavaScript. There is no interpretation at runtime.
Some highlights:
- Jtalk features an IDE with a Class browser, Workspace, Transcript, a ReferencesBrowser supporting senders/implementors and class references, basic Inspector and even a beginning of a Debugger and a unit TestRunner.
- Pharo Smalltalk is considered as the reference implementation.
- Jtalk includes a canvas to generate HTML, like Seaside
- Jtalk can use Javascript libraries and the current IDE is built on jQuery
- You can inline Javascript code and there are many ways to interact between Jtalk and Javascript
The Jtalk class browser is able to commit changes to disk. The "commit category" button will send a PUT request with the JS code of all classes in the selected class category in a file named js/CATEGORY.js and also send the corresponding .st files to the st directory.
The easiest way to enable committing is probably to setup a webdav with Apache.
The following steps explain how to setup a webdav for Jtalk with Debian, but the setup on OSX and other Linux distros should be similar.
apt-get install apache2
a2enmod dav
a2enmod dav_fs
htpasswd -c /etc/apache2/htpasswd-webdav USERNAME
Add the following lines to the default vhost (in /etc/apache2/sites-available/default):
Alias /jtalk/ "/path/to/jtalk/"
<Directory "/path/to/jtalk/">
Options Indexes MultiViews FollowSymLinks
DirectoryIndex index.html
AllowOverride None
Order allow,deny
allow from all
Dav on
AuthType Basic
AuthName "jtalk"
AuthUserFile /etc/apache2/htpasswd-webdav
<LimitExcept GET OPTIONS>
Require valid-user
</LimitExcept>
</Directory>
Make sure the group www-data has required rights to modify files in the webdav directory.
/etc/init.d/apache2 restart
Jtalk is released under the MIT license. All contributions made for inclusion are considered to be under MIT.
More on the project page