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Pict is a non-opinionated set of tools to provide the disparate parts of Model, View and Controller patterns to web, console and other applications where the UI is primarily represented as text strings.
Wow what a contentious question. Just like Thanksgiving dinner. Aaaanyway the pict framework doesn't care what you think Model-View-Controller (MVC) is; it lacks opinionation and is designed to work in odd circumstances. Each tool can be used discretely, or, they just work together if you want to use them as designed.
Trygve Reenskaug, originator of MVC at PARC, has written that "MVC was conceived as a general solution to the problem of users controlling a large and complex data set."
(Wikipedia being the acknowledged universal source of truth for humanity?)
Model–view–controller (MVC) is a software design pattern[1] commonly used for developing user interfaces that divides the related program logic into three interconnected elements. These elements are the internal representations of information (the Model), the interface (the View) that presents information to and accepts it from the user, and the Controller software linking the two.
Traditionally used for desktop graphical user interfaces (GUIs), this pattern became popular for designing web applications. Popular programming languages have MVC frameworks that facilitate the implementation of the pattern.
(according to Wikipedia)
The central component of the pattern. It is the application's dynamic data structure, independent of the user interface.[14] It directly manages the data, logic and rules of the application. In Smalltalk-80, the design of a model type is left entirely to the programmer. With WebObjects, Rails, and Django, a model type typically represents a table in the application's database.
(according to Wikipedia)
Any representation of information such as a chart, diagram or table. Multiple views of the same information are possible, such as a bar chart for management and a tabular view for accountants.
In Smalltalk-80, a view is just a visual representation of a model, and does not handle user input. With WebObjects, a view represents a complete user interface element such as a menu or button, and does receive input from the user. In both Smalltalk-80 and WebObjects, however, views are meant to be general-purpose and composable.
With Rails and Django, the role of the view is played by HTML templates, so in their scheme a view specifies an in-browser user interface rather than representing a user interface widget directly. (Django opts to call this kind of object a "template" in light of this.) This approach puts relatively less emphasis on small, composable views; a typical Rails view has a one-to-one relationship with a controller action.
Smalltalk-80 views communicate with both a model and a controller, whereas with WebObjects, a view talks only to a controller, which then talks to a model. With Rails and Django, a view/template is used by a controller/view when preparing a response to the client.
(according to Wikipedia):
Accepts input and converts it to commands for the model or view.
... and then a bunch of deviance
Sometimes you want to unit test stuff, and don't want to load the whole module into a browser. Here is a way to do so:
// This library just sets up node to run like a browser.
// It isn't necessary but allows you to use jquery.
//const libBrowserEnv = require('browser-env')
//libBrowserEnv();
const Chai = require('chai');
const Expect = Chai.expect;
const libPict = require('pict');
const libMyPictView = require(`../source/Pict-View-Sourcecode.js`);
suite
(
'PictView Basic',
() =>
{
setup(() => { });
suite
(
'Basic Tests',
() =>
{
test(
'Basic Initialization',
(fDone) =>
{
// Initialize pict
let _Pict = new libPict();
// Setup an "environment" which allows us to inspect the activity -- pict has built in EnvironmentObject and EnvironmentLog
let _PictEnvironment = new libPict.EnvironmentObject(_Pict);
// Add our view to pict now that the environment is set up
let _PictView = _Pict.addView({ Configurated:'Value' }, 'Pict-View-Name', libMyPictView);
// We might expect something more creative and unique to our view but this is a good start.
Expect(_PictView).to.be.an('object');
return fDone();
}
);
}
);
}
);
This module is rife with luxury code. If you have docker installed, you can code, run, debug and manage the library from a browser with working debugger breakpoints. This requires docker and node.js to function.
First build the docker container for our code-server service by running:
npm run docker-dev-build
Secondly, create a running instance of the docker container by running:
npm run docker-dev-run
The container will create itself locally with the container name retold-pict-dev
and
map a couple ports:
Port | Service |
---|---|
60000 | Browser-based Visual Studio Code Server |
63306 | MariaDB Server (for unit tests) |
8086 | Example meadow-endpoints API service (for unit tests using MariaDB) |
This means in a browser on your computer you can go to http://localhost:60000/ and login
with the password luxury
to begin editing code with browser-based visual studio. If
you want, you can edit code locally and just use the docker environment for unit tests.
An easy shortcut to shell into the docker environment is provided, giving you a quick bash terminal to the instance:
npm run docker-dev-shell
The unit tests require a running API server with the retold-harness data in it. The
luxury code docker image provides this for free, or you can use the scripts in the
retold-harness
folder to run them locally... find some folder on your machine you
want to run the harness from.
git clone https://github.com/stevenvelozo/retold-harness
cd retold-harness
npm install
npm run docker-dev-build
npm run docker-dev-run
You can test that the service is running by executing the following curl command:
curl localhost:8086/1.0/Author/1
Which should return the following JSON:
{
"IDAuthor": 1,
"GUIDAuthor": "e499ded3-01ce-4944-9f5a-55497dd14479",
"CreateDate": "2023-05-24T17:54:47.000Z",
"CreatingIDUser": 99999,
"UpdateDate": "2023-05-24T17:54:47.000Z",
"UpdatingIDUser": 99999,
"Deleted": 0,
"DeleteDate": null,
"DeletingIDUser": 0,
"Name": "John Green"
}
If you are into using paw files to play around with API endpoints, there is a fairly
complete file in retold-harness/model/bookstore-api-endpoint-exercises.paw
to
navigate the meadow-endpoints.
It is annoying to keep the terminal running to have API endpoints. An easy and very, extremely, awesomely stable way to run it in the background within the docker container is through the tmux command.
Then you can press [ctrl-b] and then [d] to detach from the tmux terminal. If you
ever want to go back and watch the REST logs, or, restart the service, you can run
tmux attach
to reattach to the running sessions. Further documentation of tmux
can be found on the world wide web.
If your luxury code docker container restarts, the tmux will no longer be running.
You can either execute the unit tests through the visual studio code test running interface via the browser (allowing you to leverage breakpoints for each test) or within the Docker terminal by running (from the pict folder):
npm test
These commands build and package the minified and nonminified versions into dist/
with
source maps.
npm run build
npm run build-compatible
FAQs
Pict browser library.
The npm package pict receives a total of 353 weekly downloads. As such, pict popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that pict demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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