## Introduction Thanks for your interest in contributing to the Urbit interface. This section specifically focuses on Landscape development. Landscape lets you integrate your ship with front-end web applications accessed through the browser. It has a core set of applications that accept contributions. Related to Landscape is [Gall][gall], the Arvo vane that controls userspace applications. Landscape applications will usually make good use of Gall, but it's not strictly required if a Landscape application is not interacting with ships directly. Create a development ship, then once your ship is running, mount to Unix with `|mount %`. This will create a folder named 'home' in your pier in Unix. The 'home' desk contains the working state of your ship -- like a Git repository, when you want to make a change to it, `|commit %home`. ## Contributing to Landscape applications [nix](https://github.com/NixOS/nix) and `git-lfs` should be installed at this point, and have been used to `make build` the project. Designing interfaces within urbit/urbit additionally requires that the [instructions](https://urbit.org/using/develop/#creating-a-development-ship) for fake `~zod` initialization have been followed. Once your fake ship is running and you see ``` ~zod:dojo> ``` in your console, be sure to 'mount' your ship's working state (what we call 'desks') to your local machine via the `|mount %` command. This will ensure that code you modify locally can be committed to your ship and initialized. To begin developing Urbit's frontend, you'll need to sync your currently-running fake ship with the urbit/urbit repo's code. Find the `urbitrc-sample` file found at `urbit/pkg/interface/config/urbitrc-sample`. Open it using your preferred code editor and you should see the following: ``` module.exports = { URBIT_PIERS: [ "/Users/user/ships/zod/home", ] }; ``` Edit the path between quotes `/Users/user/ships/zod/home` with wherever your fake ship is located on your machine. This zod location path *must* end in `../home` to correctly intitalize any code you write. Save the file as `urbitrc` inside that same folder. Any code edited within the `urbit/urbit` will now be able to be synced to your running ship, and previewed in the browser. To set up urbit's Javascript environment, you'll need node (ideally installed via [nvm](https://github.com/nvm-sh/nvm)) and webpack, which will be installed via node. Perform the following steps to get the above set up for urbit's apps: ``` ## go to urbit's interface directory and install the required tooling cd urbit/pkg/interface npm install ## Start watching the entire directory for changes npm run build:dev ``` Any changes made to any files within the `/pkg/interface` directory will now trigger a gulp rebuild when saved. To sync these changes to your running ship, enter dojo and input the following: ``` |commit %home ``` Your urbit should take a moment to process the changes, and will emit a `>=`. Refreshing your browser will display the newly-rendered interface. Once you are done editing code, and wish to commit changes to git, stop your `build:dev` process. Do not commit compiled code, but submit the source code for review. Please also ensure your pull request fits our standards for [Git hygiene][contributing]. [contributing]: /CONTRIBUTING.md#git-practice [arvo]: /pkg/arvo [interface]:/pkg/interface ## Linting The Urbit interface uses Eslint to lint the JavaScript code. To install the linter and for usage through the command, do the following: ```bash $ cd ./pkg/interface $ npm install $ npm run lint ``` To use the linter, run npm scripts ```bash $ npm run lint # lints all files in `interface` $ npm run lint-file ./src/apps/chat/**/*.js # lints all .js files in `interface/chat` $ npm run lint-file ./src/chat/app.js # lints a single chosen file ``` ### Gall Presently, Gall documentation is still in [progress][gall], but a good reference. For examples of Landscape apps that use Gall, see the code for [Chat][chat] and [Publish][publish]. ## Creating your own applications If you'd like to create your own application for Landscape, the easiest way to get started is using the [create-landscape-app][cla] repository template. It provides a brief wizard when you run it with `npm start`, and has good documentation for its everyday use -- just create a repo [using its template][template], install and then start it, and you'll soon be up and running. [cla]: https://github.com/urbit/create-landscape-app [template]: https://github.com/urbit/create-landscape-app/generate [gall]: https://urbit.org/docs/learn/arvo/gall/ [chat]: /pkg/arvo/app/chat-view.hoon [publish]: /pkg/arvo/app/publish.hoon