There is quite a lot to discover reading the helps.
Like one thing I find interesting that you can leave JHS and go into J and
then go back as you just paused.
You may want to be fluent in using locales.
I have heard that new utils may be on their way to make life even easier.
In the meantime it is impotant to learn how to make your application run.
It is dead easy once you know how.
Important to know how an when to do refresh in your browser as well as save
changes you do in the editor.
Can be surprising sometimes if you do not do things in the right order.
As usual info can be a bit cryptic but you will be well rewarded once you
understand what it is trying to get across to you.

On 9 Sep 2016 14:13, "Robert Herman" <[email protected]> wrote:

Glad to read this. I have resisted the whole HTML5 thing, but it does have
inertia.

I think JQT is slick, but in reality, seeing my programs in the browser
tickled me in the right way the other day. I was programming in C using
Raylib, and it uses emscripten to port it to JavaScript. It runs in the
browser! Raylib is a C-based game dev package that allows you to write
games in C and deploy to many platforms.
I'd love to be able to write and test my J programs in JHS, and then wrap
them up for distribution on my website to showcase anything I may be using
J to solve or demo.

I wish there were more meaty demos in J on just how to use JHS to create a
something like Martin Saurer does with his setup and YouTube videos. I
would create them if I were skilled enough, but I need to get over the
initial bump first with a really good tutorial or video.

Are there any JHS gems I may have missed online?

Rob





On 9 September 2016 at 20:54, Björn Helgason <[email protected]> wrote:

> I have finally found out how to do the udemy html5 course offline.
> It is dead easy once you know how to.
> It really explains the concepts in easy steps.
> A man talking in the background slowly explaining while typing and showing
> a browser and notepad++ at the same time.
> I have been revisting JHS too and. there is so much there to use and
> combine.
> I guess many people could benefit from learning how to combine J stuff
with
> html5.
> Once you start knowing a little bit you realize you can add just a little
> something and then some more.
> The demos are easy and great and combine them with labs you will be amazed
> at what you can do.
> Some people may not realize the potential of learning to use locales in
the
> locales lab and see how you can take the data and manipulate it a bit and
> then show it in the browser.
> I guess there is a barrier to learn how to combine the browser with J.
> Once you do realize you will be hooked.
> I have dibbled into html over the years but getting the basics explained
is
> making a huge difference for me.
> Some things I may have wondered about were a lot easier to understand than
> I imagined.
> I guess html5 is a lot more than what I realized and also easier than I
> thought.
> Combine it what I already know about J and JHS is really powerful and I am
> only just starting I feel after all these years.
> Good fun and good times ahead!
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> For information about J forums see http://www.jsoftware.com/forums.htm
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