view website/src/tutorial.html.luan @ 1670:0046c5eb3315

update manual.html
author Franklin Schmidt <fschmidt@gmail.com>
date Tue, 10 May 2022 17:08:50 -0600
parents 500c706ed4ea
children 4b56eff90040
line wrap: on
line source

local Luan = require "luan:Luan.luan"
local error = Luan.error
local Io = require "luan:Io.luan"
local Http = require "luan:http/Http.luan"
local Shared = require "site:/lib/Shared.luan"
local head = Shared.head or error()
local docs_header = Shared.docs_header or error()


return function()
	Io.stdout = Http.response.text_writer()
%>
<!doctype html>
<html>
	<head>
<%		head() %>
		<title>Luan Tutorial</title>
	</head>
	<body>
<%		docs_header() %>
		<div content>

<h1>Luan Tutorial</h1>


<p>Create a file <b>hello.luan</b> containing:</p>

<pre>
	%&gt;
	Hello World
	&lt;%
</pre>

<p>To run this, type <b>luan hello.luan</b> on the command line.  This should print <b>Hello World</b>.</p>

<p>The syntax here is based on <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JavaServer_Pages">JSP</a>.  Let's change it a little:</p>

<pre>
	local name = "Bob"
	%&gt;
	Hello &lt;%= name %&gt;
	&lt;%
</pre>

<p>This should print <b>Hello Bob</b>.  Now let's try a more conventional approach:</p>

<pre>
	local Io = require "luan:Io.luan"
	local print = Io.print

	print("Hello World")
</pre>

<p>In Luan, a function call with one string argument doesn't require parenthesis, so <b>print("Hello World")</b> is the same as <b>print "Hello World"</b> and <b>require "luan:Io.luan"</b> is the same as <b>require("luan:Io.luan")</b>.  Both <b>require</b> and <b>print</b> are functions.</p>

<p>The <b>require</b> function takes a <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniform_resource_identifier">URI</a> as an argument.  Examples of URIs are "<b>luan:Io.luan</b>" and "<b>file:hello.luan</b>".  <b>require</b> is used to import a module, which is returned from the <b>require</b> function call.  In the case above, we assign the module to the local variable <b>Io</b>.  The function <b>print</b> is a member of this module.  We could have done <b>Io.print("Hello World")</b> but instead we chose to assign <b>print</b> to a local variable and use that to call the function.</p>

<p>Luan starts with only one defined function: <b>require</b>.  You will use <b>require</b> to import whatever you need.  This is a little more work, but makes it clear in each file where each function comes from.</p>

<p>Let's a make fancier version:</p>

<pre>
	local Io = require "luan:Io.luan"
	local print = Io.print

	local function hello(name)
		print("Hello "..name)
	end

	hello("Bob")
</pre>

<p>The <b>..</b> operator does concatenation.  This will print <b>Hello Bob</b>.</p>

<p>Now let's make a web page.  First we need a directory for our website.  So create a directory <b>src</b>.  In this directory, create a file <b>hi.html.luan</b> containing:

<pre>
	local Io = require "luan:Io.luan"
	local Http = require "luan:http/Http.luan"
	
	return function()
		Io.stdout = Http.response.text_writer()
	%&gt;
	&lt;!doctype html>
	&lt;html>
		&lt;body>
			Hello World
		&lt;/body>
	&lt;/html>
	&lt;%
	end
</pre>

<p>Now go back to the parent directory and do <b>luan luan:http/serve.luan src</b>.  This will run the Luan web server on port 8080.  Try going to <a href="http://localhost:8080/">http://localhost:8080/</a>.  You should see the directory.  If you click on <b>hi.html.luan</b> you will see the source.  But if you remove the <b>.luan</b> and just go to <a href="http://localhost:8080/hi.html">http://localhost:8080/hi.html</a> then you will run the program which will generate the web page.  In fact the page that you are currently looking at <b>tutorial.html</b> is generated from <a href="tutorial.html.luan">tutorial.html.luan</a>.</p>

<p>The Luan webserver expects the file to return a function and calls it to generate the page.  Code of the form <b>%&gt;...&lt;%</b> writes its output to <b>Io.stdout</b> which by default is the standard output of the command line.  So in the returned function one usually starts by setting <b>Io.stdout</b> to a <code>text_writer</code> which writes its output to the HTTP response (to the web browser).</p>

<p>You can find this example and others in the <a href="examples/">examples directory</a>.  Take a look at <a href="examples/hi2.html.luan">hi2.html.luan</a> next.  Remember to remove the <b>.luan</b> from the URL to run the code.</p>

<p>So now you have built your website and you want to publish it to the web.  If you have your own domain, create a CNAME record for it pointing to <b>s1.luan.software</b>.  If you don't have a domain, just use a domain like <b>bob.s1.luan.software</b> (anything of the form <b>*.s1.luan.software</b>).  Assuming your directory is <b>src</b> and you will use the password <b>secret</b>, do the following from the command line:

<pre>
	luan luan:host/push.luan bob.s1.luan.software secret src
</pre>

<p>The form is <b>luan luan:host/push.luan domain password directory</b>.  If you change your site, just run this again and your site will be updated.  To delete your site, do <b>luan luan:host/delete.luan domain password</b>.</p>

<p>Hopefully this short tutorial gave you an idea of how to use Luan to make a website.</p>
		
		</div>
	</body>
</html>
<%
end