A VT100 Serial Terminal as a Web App (with both syntax highlighted and graphical editors) - designed for writing code on microcontrollers that use the Espruino JavaScript interpreter. It can also run natively via Node.js and Electron, or a version
This is a Chrome Web App (mainly) that uses chome.serial to access your PC's serial port. You can download it from the Chrome Web Store: https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/espruino-serial-terminal/bleoifhkdalbjfbobjackfdifdneehpo
It implements basic VT100 terminal features (up/down/left/right/etc) - enough for you to write code using the Espruino. You can also use the right-hand pane to write JavaScript code on the PC, and can then click the 'transfer' icon to send that code directly down the Serial Port.
Version | Communications | Benefits |
---|---|---|
Web Version | Audio, Bluetooth Low Energy (via Web Bluetooth) and USB/Serial via WebSerial | RECOMMENDED - Just go to a URL |
Chrome Web App | USB, Serial, Audio, TCP/IP | Easy to install from Chrome Web Store - but Google are deprecating the web store |
Node.js App / NW.js app | USB, Serial, Bluetooth Low Energy | Can be run on systems without Chrome web browser |
The development of this app is supported by purchases of official Espruino boards as well as the generous donations of my supporters on Patreon
This is how we'd recommend using the IDE. You can use:
- Our hosted IDE: https://espruino.com/ide
- 'master' branch hosted on GitHub Pages: https://espruino.github.io/EspruinoWebIDE/
- Or your own fork of this repository running on any HTTPS Server (eg GitHub Pages)
This is deprecated by Google and may be removed soon:
- Install the Chrome Web Browser
- Go Here to find the app in the Chrome Web Store
- Click 'Install'
- Click 'Launch App'
If you have an up to date version of Node.js and NPM, you can execute the commands:
- On Linux,
sudo apt-get install build-essential libudev-dev
sudo npm install nw -g
sudo npm install espruino-web-ide -g
- To enable BLE support:
sudo setcap cap_net_raw+eip $(eval readlink -f $(which node))
espruino-web-ide
Note: For command-line access you might also want to take a look at EspruinoTools
Note 2: If you're not seeing any options for devices to connect to, it might be because your nw.js
and node versions don't match. If that's the case you need to manually rebuild all the 'native' modules.
npm install -g nw-gyp
# Now, for directory in node_modules with a binding.gyp file...
# target should match the nw.js version in node_modules/nw/package.json
nw-gyp rebuild --target=0.18.6 --arch=x64
You need to obtain both the EspruinoWebIDE repository and the EspruinoTools repository, a submodule used in the Web IDE. A simple way to obtain both repositories is via the git command:
git clone --recursive https://github.com/espruino/EspruinoWebIDE.git
This will clone both the EspruinoWebIDE repository and the submodule dependencies. Alternatively, you can download or clone both repositories individually following the steps below:
- Download the files in EspruinoWebIDE to an
EspruinoWebIDE
directory on your PC (either as a ZIP File, or using git) - Download the files in EspruinoTools into the
EspruinoWebIDE/EspruinoTools
on your PC (either as a ZIP File, or using git)
Running in Node.js
- Go to the
EspruinoWebIDE
directory - Run
sudo npm install nw -g
- Run
npm install
- Run
npm start
This web app requires the following permissions:
- Serial port access : So that it can access the Espruino board via USB/Serial
- Webcam access : So that when you click the little person icon in the top-right of the terminal window, you can overlay the terminal on a live video feed
- Audio access: if you want to communicate with Espruino using your headphone jack
- Filesystem/storage access : For loading/saving your JavaScript files to your local disk
- Run the Web app
- Click the
Help
(?) icon, then theTour
button to get a guided tour.
Running with Node.js/Electron and don't see any ports when you try and connect? You're probably using a version of Node.js that doesn't match Electron. This causes NPM to load binary modules (for serialport
and bleat
) that are for the old version of Node and that won't work in Electron. To fix it, update Node.js, delete node_modules
and run npm install
again.
Debugging with NW In order to debug the WebIDE using DevTools you need to install the SDK flavor of nw. This can be done with npm install -g nw --nwjs_build_type=sdk
instead of just npm install -g nw
. Once the SDK flavor is installed you can specify a remote-debug port like this nw --remote-debugging-port=9222
.
Contributions are welcome - especially if they make the Web IDE easier to use for newcomers!
Espruino Web IDE expects the EspruinoTools repository to be in EspruinoWebIDE/EspruinoTools
. If you're using Git, make sure you add it using the command:
git submodule add [email protected]:espruino/EspruinoTools.git
- Please stick to a K&R style with no tabs and 2 spaces per indent
- Filenames should start with a lowerCase letter, and different words should be capitalised, not split with underscores
- Core functionality goes in
js/core
, Plugins go injs/plugins
. Seeplugins/_examplePlugin.js
for an example layout - Plugins/core need to implement in init function, which is called when the document (and settings) have loaded.
- Plugins can respond to specific events using
Espruino.addProcessor
. For instance you can useEspruino.addProcessor("transformForEspruino", function (data,callback) { .. })
and can modify code before it is sent to Espruino. - Icons are added using
Espruino.Core.App.addIcon
and are generally added from JsvaScript file that performs the operation - Config is stored in
Espruino.Config.FOO
and is changed withEspruino.Config.set("FOO", value)
.Espruino.Core.Config.add
can be used to add an option to the Settings menu. - Annoyingly, right now plugins still have to be loaded via a
<script>
tag inmain.html