NOTE: Crochet is in early stages of development, there will be a lot of breaking changes here as I figure out what kind of language fits the games I want to create, and how to generalise that.
Crochet is a tool designed for creating and remixing interactive media safely. It is best thought as targeting the domains of Interactive Fiction, Simulation Games, Software Verification, and Interactive/Live Language Tooling.
The documentation books on Crochet are a work in progress, you can find them in the Crochet documentation website.
Currently there's:
- A reference book, which discusses the concepts and design philosophy of Crochet;
- A syntax cheatsheet, which just lists all syntactical forms with examples; and
- A contribution book, which describes how to contribute to Crochet.
For now, you can install Crochet from npm. You want the @qteatime/crochet
package with the experimental flag:
$ npm install @qteatime/crochet@experimental
You can also compile it from source:
$ git clone https://github.com/qteatime/crochet.git
$ cd crochet
$ npm install
$ node make build
See crochet --help
(or ./node_modules/.bin/crochet --help
if you've installed it locally) for usage information.
You can try programming interactively with the Playground. You can run with:
$ crochet playground <path/to/your/crochet.json>
For node projects you need to specify node
as your Playground execution
target, since the default is running the package in the browser:
$ crochet playground <path/to/your/crochet.json> --target node
You do need to specify a package because that's how Crochet tracks dependencies and capabilities. All code you type in the Playground will be executed in the context of the given package. And all dependencies of that package will be loaded first.
The Playground accepts both declarations and statements/expressions.
You can get a reference documentation page on any package by using the
docs
command. E.g.:
$ crochet docs <path/to/crochet.core/crochet.json>
You'll be able to navigate through the documentation by accessing http://localhost:8080 in your browser.
You can run a Crochet package on the terminal by using the run
command.
E.g.:
$ crochet run <path/to/your/crochet.json> -- argument1 argument2
Anything after --
is passed as the invocation arguments as-is to your
package. You must provide a command called main: _
, where the only
parameter will be this list of command line arguments.
Web packages are currently run with the run-web
command. This does not
accept any invocation arguments:
$ crochet run-web <path/to/your/crochet.json>
You can provide a different port with --port 12345
. Currently the server
is started on port 8000, and Crochet does not try to find an available
port if that one is taken.
Copyright (c) 2021 Niini
Licensed under the permissive MIT licence.