Start a REPL (in a terminal: lein repl
, or from Emacs: open a
clj/cljs file in the project, then do M-x cider-jack-in
. Make sure
CIDER is up to date).
In the REPL do
(run)
The call to (run)
does two things, it starts the webserver at port
10555, and also the Figwheel server which takes care of live reloading
ClojureScript code and CSS. Give them some time to start.
When you see the line Successfully compiled "resources/public/app.js" in 21.36 seconds.
, you're ready to go. Browse to
http://localhost:10555
and enjoy.
Attention: It is not longer needed to run lein figwheel
separately. This is now taken care of behind the scenes
If all is well you now have a browser window saying 'Hello Chestnut',
and a REPL prompt that looks like cljs.user=>
.
Open resources/public/css/style.css
and change some styling of the
H1 element. Notice how it's updated instantly in the browser.
Open src/cljs/test/core.cljs
, and change dom/h1
to
dom/h2
. As soon as you save the file, your browser is updated.
In the REPL, type
(ns test.session)
(swap! app-state assoc :text "Interactivity FTW")
Notice again how the browser updates.
This assumes you have a
Heroku account, have installed the
Heroku toolbelt, and have done a
heroku login
before.
git init
git add -A
git commit
heroku create
git push heroku master:master
heroku open
Heroku uses Foreman to run your
app, which uses the Procfile
in your repository to figure out which
server command to run. Heroku also compiles and runs your code with a
Leiningen "production" profile, instead of "dev". To locally simulate
what Heroku does you can do:
lein with-profile -dev,+production uberjar && foreman start
Now your app is running at http://localhost:5000 in production mode.
Copyright © 2015 Eric Juta
Distributed under the Eclipse Public License either version 1.0 or (at your option) any later version.