-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 237
Library Guidelines
To develop a library for Processing, the Library Template project provides a starting point.
Please inform us about the existence of your library by posting your contribution in the Processing Forum under Libraries. Be sure to let us know where we can find the library's web page online.
Each library contribution should include the following:
-
Documentation – We recommend using Javadoc-style comments in your library code since it is the most common way to document a Java API. You can use the Javadoc tool or any number of other tools that can convert code with Javadoc-style comments into lovely reference materials. The documentation should be stored in a folder named
reference
, and include anindex.html
file that is the starting point. -
Examples – Users tend to learn best from examples, therefore examples are important for a library release. It is highly recommended to support your library with various sample programs to demonstrate the use and potential of the library.
-
Properties File – To show information about your library from within the PDE, you need to provide a `library.properties file. This file contains the full name of your library, a brief summary of its purpose, and other information. More information on the Library Basics page.
-
Home Page – A Processing library should have its own web page, stored at a stable URL (or at least as stable as possible), and should include:
- A short abstract that describes the purpose of the library.
- The library has been successfully tested on which platforms? (OS X, Windows XP and Vista, Linux)
- The latest Processing version the library has been tested with?
- Dependencies. Does the library depend on any other library?
- A list of examples that demonstrate the use and potential of the library.
- Source code (if open source). We recommend using Google Code to host the source code of a library in a SVN repository, then it is very easy to browse the code online.
- Keywords that describe the aim and function of the library.
- Last update. When was the last update of the library?
- A link to a zip file that includes the library, documentation and examples.
-
Source Code – We strongly encourage (and will soon require as a stipulation for placement on the site) that the source to your library be included. If you don't want to distribute source, that's perfectly fine, however only libraries that include their code will be promoted at processing.org/reference/libraries. We're giving away all our stuff, and we want others to do so as well because it's good for the community. This also ensures that your library lives on past your own interest in its maintenance.
Libraries should be distributed as zipped files, and the distribution should be laid out as follows:
theLibrary/library/theLibrary.jar
theLibrary/reference/
theLibrary/examples/
theLibrary/src/
theLibrary/library.properties
The reference
folder contains the documentation in HTML format as generated from Javadoc, the examples
folder contains a set of sketches that help to understand the usage and functionality of the library. The library
only contains the library's JAR file (and if necessary, any additional .jar
, .dll
, .so
, or .jnilib
files). Anything that is found inside the library
folder will be exported with your sketch. The src
folder contains the source. The name "src" is used because that's the default for Eclipse (and presumably other IDEs).
Following the folder structure is important because it simplifies documentation, and makes it easier for users to know what to expect. It also means that your reference pages can automatically be added to the Help menu in the PDE, and your library examples will automatically be added to the Examples menu. By placing your library in a .zip
file and following the structure above, it enables future possibilities for automatic installation and library updates.
Be sure to remove .DS_Store
files created by macOS from the folders before posting. The following command can be executed in Terminal.app
to delete all .DS_Store
files (recursively) from a folder:
find YourFolderName -name .DS_Store -delete
Be careful to specify your folder name properly. Don't use /
or something that would cause the very powerful, very efficient find
command to remove all .DS_Store
files from your disk.
Or create directly a .zip
file without .DS_Store
files:
zip -r theLibrary.zip theLibrary -x "*.DS_Store"