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| author | Misko Hevery | 2011-04-29 15:18:27 -0700 | 
|---|---|---|
| committer | Igor Minar | 2011-06-06 22:28:38 -0700 | 
| commit | 11e9572b952e49b01035e956c412d6095533031a (patch) | |
| tree | 04dbf96802f552693d44c541c0d825a2769e3d57 /docs/content/tutorial/index.ngdoc | |
| parent | b6bc6c2ddf1ae1523ec7e4cb92db209cd6501181 (diff) | |
| download | angular.js-11e9572b952e49b01035e956c412d6095533031a.tar.bz2 | |
Move documentation under individual headings
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/content/tutorial/index.ngdoc')
| -rw-r--r-- | docs/content/tutorial/index.ngdoc | 172 | 
1 files changed, 172 insertions, 0 deletions
| diff --git a/docs/content/tutorial/index.ngdoc b/docs/content/tutorial/index.ngdoc new file mode 100644 index 00000000..b430b248 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/content/tutorial/index.ngdoc @@ -0,0 +1,172 @@ +@workInProgress +@ngdoc overview +@name Tutorial +@description + +A great way to get introduced to angular is to work through the {@link tutorial.step_00 angular +tutorial}, which walks you through the construction of an angular web app. The app you will build +in the tutorial is loosely based on the {@link http://www.google.com/phone/ Google phone gallery +app}. The {@link http://angular.github.com/angular-phonecat/step-11/app/ end result of our effort} +is visually simpler, but demonstrates many of the angular features without distractions in the +form of CSS code. + +This tutorial app ends up like a Google phone gallery app, but is originally based on the {@link +https://github.com/angular/angular-seed angular-seed project}. The angular seed app isn't +necessary for building angular apps, but it helps you get started quickly and makes the +development and testing process much easier. Angular-seed includes a simple example, the latest +angular libraries, test libraries, and scripts.  It provides all of these in an environment that +is pre-configured for developing a typical web app.  + +Once you set up your tutorial environment, you should be able to get through the material in less +than a day and you'll have fun doing it. More experienced coders may be able to zip through the +exercises in an afternoon. In any case, we promise that your time will be well spent! + +When you finish the tutorial you will be able to: + +* Create a simple dynamic application that works in any browser +* Define the differences between angular and common JavaScript frameworks +* Understand angular expressions +* Understand how data binding works in angular +* Use the angular-seed project to quickly boot-strap your own projects +* Create and run tests +* Identify resources for learning more about angular + +You can work through the tutorial in any of the following ways: + +* <a href="#UsingGit">Using Git</a>. Use the Git versioning system to get the files for each step. +* <a href="#UsingSnapshots">Using Snapshots</a>. Download snapshots (files for each step of the +tutorial) and tinker with them. +* <a href="#ReadingExamples">Reading the Examples</a>. Read through the examples, and inspect +results and code on our server. + +The first two ways (Git and snapshots) give you a fuller experience, in that you can run the unit +and end-to-end tests in addition to the tutorial app.  They also give you the ability to play +around with the code and get instant feedback in your browser.  The last way (reading through the +tutorial online) requires no setup on your machine, but you can't run the tests, and it won't be +as easy to play around with the code. + +<a name="PreReqs"></a> +# Prerequisites for Git and Snapshots + +To run the tutorial app and tests on your machine (using Git or the snapshots) you will need the +following: + +* You need to be running on a Mac or Linux machine. +* An http server running on your system. If you don't already have one installed, you can install +`node.js` ({@link https://github.com/joyent/node/wiki/Installation node.js install}) or another +http sever (such as Apache, etc.). +* Java. This is required for running tests. Angular itself doesn't require Java. +* A modern browser (including IE8+). Needed for viewing and debugging code. +* A text editor of your choice. + +<a name="UsingGit"></a> +# Using Git + +The following instructions are for developers who are comfortable with Git's versioning system: + +1. Check to be sure you have all of the <a href="#PreReqs">prerequisites</a> on your system. + +2. Clone the angular-phonecat repository located at {@link +https://github.com/angular/angular-phonecat angular-phonecat} by running the following command in +a terminal: + +           git clone git://github.com/angular/angular-phonecat.git + +   This will create a directory called `angular-phonecat`. + +3. In terminal, navigate to the `angular-phonecat` directory and run: + +           git checkout step-0 + +   (You can run `git checkout step-[0-11]` to go to any of the steps in the tutorial). + +4. To see the app running in a browser, do the following: +   * __For node.js users:__ +       1. Run `./scripts/web-server.js` to start the app server. +       2. Open a browser window for the app and navigate to http://localhost:8000/app/index.html. + +   * __For other http servers:__ +       1. Configure the server to serve the files in the `angular-phonecat` directory. +       2. Run `./scripts/web-server.js` to start the app server. +       3. Navigate in your browser to +       http://localhost:[*port-number*]/[*context-path*]/app/index.html. + +5. To see tests running in a browser, do the following: +   * __For node.js users:__ +       1. Run `./scripts/test-server.sh` to start the test web server. +       2. Open a browser window for the tests, navigate to http://localhost:9876, and choose +       "strict mode". +   * __For other http servers:__ +       1. Configure the server to serve the files in the `angular-phonecat` directory. +       1. Run `./scripts/test-server.sh` to start the test web server. +       3. Navigate in your browser to http://localhost:[*port-number*]/, and choose "strict mode". + + + +<a name="UsingSnapshots"></a> +# Using Snapshots + +Snapshots are the sets of files that reflect the state of the tutorial app at each step. These +files include the HTML, CSS, and JavaScript for the app, plus Jasmine JavaScript files and Java +libraries for the test stack. These will let you run the tutorial app and tests, without requiring +knowledge of Git.  You can download and install the snapshot files as follows: + +1. Check to be sure you have all of the <a href="#PreReqs">prerequisites</a> on your system. + +2. Navigate to [*the angular server*], and download and unzip [*the snapshot file*] to an +[*install-dir*] of your choosing. + +3. Change directories to [*install-dir*]/sandbox. + +4. Run the following command: +    * `./goto_step.sh 0` + +    You have to start out at the beginning, which is Step 0. After you set up Step 0, you can skip +    around between any steps.  + +1. To see the app running in your browser, do the following: +    * __For node.js users:__ +       1. Run `./scripts/web-server.js` to run the web server. +       2. Open a browser window for the app and navigate to http://localhost:8000/app/index.html. +       3. Open a browser window for the tests, navigate to http://localhost:9876, and choose +       "strict mode". + +   * __For other http servers:__ +       1. Configure servers to serve the app and test files in the [*install-dir*]/sandbox. +       2. Start the server. +       3. Navigate in your app browser to +       http://localhost:[*port-number*]/[*context-path*]/app/index.html. +       4. Navigate in your test browser to http://localhost:[*port-number*] and choose "strict +       mode". + +1. To view the tutorial app at different steps, run `./goto_step.sh [0-11]` and then refresh your +browser. For example, say you're on Step 5 of the tutorial, and you want to see the app in action: + +    1. Run `goto_step.sh 5` from the command line in the `sandbox` directory. +    1. Refresh your app browser. + +<a name="ReadingExamples"></a> +# Reading the Examples + +If you don't want to set up anything on your local machine, you can read through the tutorial and +inspect the tutorial files on our servers; doing this will give you a good idea of what angular +does, but you won't be able to make any code changes and experiment on your own. + +To see the running app at each tutorial step, click the "Example" link at the top or bottom of +each tutorial page.  + +To view the code differences between tutorial steps, click the Code Diff link at top or bottom of +each tutorial page. Additions are highlighted in green; deletions are highlighted in red.  + + +# Relative URLs +Throughout the tutorial, we use relative URLs to refer to files hosted on our local http server. +The absolute URL depends on your configuration. For example, if you are using the node.js server, +`app/index.html` translates to: + +       http://localhost:8000/app/index.html + +If you are using your own http server running on port 8080 and the tutorial files are hosted at +`/angular_tutorial`, `app/index.html` translates to: + +       http://localhost:8080/angular_tutorial/app/index.html | 
