In terms of patching jQuery core, I usually grab a build of the latest
revision, and work off that.  Then backport changes to the svn
checkout to generate a diff.

As for testing random jQuery snippets, I've been eating my own
medicine and using the jQuery tester utility I wrote.

-- dz



On Thu, Mar 12, 2009 at 11:18 PM, Daniel Friesen
<nadir.seen.f...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I'm wondering what kind of tricks and setups other people have when they
> are developing with jQuery.
> Be it writing some improvements to jQuery itself, or writing a plugin.
> I'm not really looking for those using jQuery in an application, cause
> that environment is normally just taking a few jQuery files and plugins
> and including that into your existing development environment.
>
> I'm trying to find out how people (plugin and core jQuery developers)
> normally handle their development environment for working on jQuery or a
> jQuery plugin.
>
> Every time I work on another piece for jQuery, I end up creating a new
> html file, which normally consists of either copying some junk from
> another project and modifying it, or constructing a new one by grabbing
> a doctype and a few tags off some references on the internet. I also end
> up grabbing jQuery again to shove in and include.
> As for actually testing stuff, I normally might just go off the
> filesystem, however sometimes that doesn't quite work right, and I end
> up needing to configure a local webserver (normally I just edit the
> config for my local nginx).
> Things get real ugly when working on patches to jQuery core itself.
> Mostly because of needing to `make jquery` all the time. Sometimes I end
> up sitting there for a few minutes trying to figure out "why the hell
> didn't my edit fix this bug?" then realize I forgot to rebuilt jquery
> before I refreshed the page to test it.
>
> All in all, I don't really consider it a nice and clean, or even helpful
> environment.
> For that reason I've actually started experimenting with building a
> Rails app to manage projects and streamline things like creating html
> pages from templates, previewing a page and working on code live, as
> well as nice integration for github forks of jQuery (fork/clone as in
> gitspeak), jQuery svn, and different versions of jQuery.
>
> --
> ~Daniel Friesen (Dantman, Nadir-Seen-Fire)
>
>
> >
>

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