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How to run apps
Since our package system is similar to LÖVE, following guides are modified from its Wiki.
node-webkit
can load an app in two ways:
- From a folder. The startup path specifies this folder.
- From a
.nw
file (a renamed .zip-file). The startup path specifies the file.
In both cases, there has to be a file called package.json
in the startup path or .nw
zipfile. This file will be parsed when node-webkit
starts. If this file is missing, node-webkit
will not recognize the folder or .nw
file as app, and it will complain about a wrongly packaged app. A frequently made mistake is zipping the folder rather than its contents. This stems from very old practice (because when you unzip a folder you don't want it to splash out all over your current directory), but for node-webkit
doing that doesn't make sense: you need to zip the app folder's contents only, to get a correct .nw
.
On Windows, the easiest way to run the app is to drag the folder onto nw.exe
, or a shortcut to nw.exe
. Remember to drag the folder containing package.json
, and not package.json
itself.
You can also call it from the command line:
For instance:
nw C:\apps\myapp
nw C:\apps\packagedapp.nw
On Linux, you can use one of these command lines:
nw /home/path/to/appdir/
nw /home/path/to/packagedapp.nw
If you have installed the .deb
, you can double click on .nw
files in your file manager as well.
On Mac OSX, a folder or .nw
file can be dropped onto the nw.app application bundle. On the Mac OSX Terminal (commandline), you can use nw like this (assuming it's installed to the Applications directory):
open -n -a node-webkit "/home/path/to/app"
In some cases it may be faster to invoke the nw binary inside the application bundle directly via the following:
/Applications/node-webkit.app/Contents/MacOS/node-webkit myapp
You can setup an alias in your Terminal session to call the binary when you use nw by adding an alias to your ~/.bash_profile (open -a TextEdit ~/.bash_profile):
# alias to nw
alias nw="/Applications/node-webkit.app/Contents/MacOS/node-webkit"
Now you can call nw from the commandline like Linux and Windows:
nw "/home/path/to/game"