Difference between revisions of "Grapefruit"

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[[Category:Libraries]]
 
[[Category:Libraries]]
 
[[Category:Arrow]]
 
[[Category:Arrow]]
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[[Category:Graphics]]
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[[Category:FRP]]
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[[Category:Packages]]
   
 
== About ==
 
== About ==
   
Grapefruit is a library for creating graphical user interfaces and animated graphics in a declarative way. It contains an implementation of [[Functional Reactive Programming]] and a record system which can be useful in other areas than GUI and graphics programming.
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Grapefruit is a library for [[Functional Reactive Programming]] (FRP) with a focus on user interfaces. FRP makes it possible to implement reactive and interactive systems in a declarative style. With Grapefruit, user interfaces are described as networks of communicating widgets and windows. Communication is done via different kinds of signals which describe temporal behavior.
   
 
== Features ==
Grapefruit is currently based on [[Gtk2Hs]] but implementations on top of other GUI libraries are planned for the future. By using different GUI libraries on different platforms, Grapefruit shall be able to adapt to local look and feel conventions.
 
   
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Grapefruit has the following important features:
Grapefruit makes it possible to implement graphical user interfaces by describing them as systems of interconnected components. Components can be visible components like widgets and windows but also invisible components which provide certain control functionality. Component systems can be built from components by using methods from the <hask>Arrow</hask> and <hask>ArrowLoop</hask> classes.
 
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* a push-based FRP implementation where signals
  +
** can be memoized using ordinary variable bindings
  +
** can be merged without doubling of simultaneous events
  +
** cannot behave differently by starting them at different times
  +
* a record system which makes it possible that
  +
** input signals can be left out to get default behavior
  +
** output signals can be left out to ignore uninteresting data
  +
** output signals can be chosen and fetched by pattern matching
  +
* an abstract UI implementation which can work with different backends which in turn use different toolkits to provide different look and feel with one and the same application code (At the moment, the only supported UI toolkit is GTK+ (via [[Gtk2Hs]]). We plan to support Qt in the future, making use of the [[HQK]] project’s output.)
   
  +
You might be interested in a [[Grapefruit/Comparison to other FRP libraries|comparison of Grapefruit to other FRP libaries]]
Components communicate via signals. A signal is either continuous or discrete. A continuous signal denotes a time-varying value. A discrete signal denotes a sequence of values assigned to discrete points in time and can therefore be used to model streams of events. Several functions allow the construction of signals in a purely functional manner.
 
   
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== Installation ==
Grapefruit has also support for list signals, special signals denoting time-varying lists where each element has a unique identity. An algebra for list signals provides operations like concatenation, filtering and sorting. The key point is that when the value of a list signal changes, the values of the list signals depending on it do not have to be recalculated completely but can be just updated incrementally.
 
   
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=== Released versions ===
User interfaces with a changing collection of widgets are also possible with Grapefruit. There is a special widget which takes a list signal of widgets as its input and always contains the elements of it as its child widgets.
 
   
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Grapefruit is released on [[Hackage]]. If you do not have special requirements, you can install Grapefruit by saying <code>cabal install grapefruit-ui-gtk grapefruit-examples</code>.
Furthermore, it is possible to implement animations using graphic signals. These are implemented on top of OpenGL. So-called caching graphic signals are available to make use of OpenGL’s display lists.
 
   
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If you do not have installed the <code>gtk</code> package yet, this command will also try to install this package. However, this will fail unless <code>gtk2hs-buildtools</code> is already installed. See the [http://projects.haskell.org/gtk2hs/ Gtk2Hs website] for further information.
With Grapefruit, user interface descriptions always cover the complete lifetime of the respective interface. No explicit event handler registrations and no explicit recalculations of values are necessary. This is in line with the declarative nature of Haskell because it stresses how the user interface operates instead of how this operation is achieved. Internally though, signals are implemented efficiently using the event dispatching and handling mechanism of the underlying GUI toolkit.
 
   
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=== Development versions ===
The roots of Grapefruit lie in systems like [[Applications_and_libraries/GUI_libraries#FranTk|FranTk]] and [[Applications_and_libraries/GUI_libraries#wxFruit|wxFruit]]. Grapefruit tries to combine concepts of these systems with new ideas to become a system which maintains a reasonable balance between ease of use and efficiency, and is applicable to real world problems.
 
   
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Currently, Grapefruit is undergoing a complete rewrite, which will base it on new concepts. For each part of the new Grapefruit, there is a corresponding [[Darcs|darcs]] repository at <nowiki>http://darcs.grapefruit-project.org/</nowiki>''package-name''/main. The code of the old 0.1&nbsp;branch of Grapefruit resides in a single darcs repository at http://darcs.grapefruit-project.org/monolithic/0.1.
== Status ==
 
   
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== Running the examples ==
As of October 2007, Grapefruit is still in an early stage. Lots of basic concepts are implemented but Grapefruit still lacks a wide variety of widgets, for example. However, adding new widgets shouldn’t be too difficult since Grapefruit provides good generic support for doing this.
 
   
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You can run the examples by typing the following lines into GHCi:
Furthermore, work on formal specification and verification of GUI properties based on Grapefruit’s GUI programming interface and [[Dependent type|dependent types]] has just started. The proof assistant [[Coq]] will be used in this context.
 
   
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<blockquote><p><code>import Graphics.UI.Grapefruit.Circuit</code><br /><code>import Graphics.UI.Grapefruit.'''''UIBackend'''''</code><br /><code>import Examples.Grapefruit.'''''Example'''''</code><br /><code>run '''''UIBackend''''' mainCircuit ()</code></p></blockquote>
== Source code ==
 
   
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Replace <code>'''''Example'''''</code> with the name of the example to run and <code>'''''UIBackend'''''</code> with the name of the UI backend you want to use. At the moment, the only meaningful replacement for <code>'''''UIBackend'''''</code> is <code>GTK</code>. Possible replacements for <code>'''''Example'''''</code> are <code>Converter</code>, <code>ListView</code>, <code>SetView</code>, <code>Simple</code>, and <code>Switching</code>.
The source code of Grapefruit resides inside a [[Darcs|darcs]] repository under http://softbase.org/grapefruit/darcs/main/. To get a copy, you can use the command <code><nowiki>darcs get http://softbase.org/grapefruit/darcs/main</nowiki></code>.
 
   
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We do not provide ready-to-use executables since it is possible (at least in theory) to run the examples with different UI backends and an executable would be fixed to a specific backend.
== Building ==
 
 
You need at least GHC&nbsp;6.8.1 and Gtk2Hs&nbsp;0.9.12.1 to build and use Grapefruit. Currently, Grapefruit is tested with GHC&nbsp;6.8.2 and Gtk2Hs&nbsp;0.9.12.1. For building the API documentation, you need Haddock&nbsp;2.0.0.0.
 
 
Grapefruit consists of the following packages, each residing inside a equally-named directory in the source tree:
 
* grapefruit-frp
 
* grapefruit-records
 
* grapefruit-gui
 
* grapefruit-graphics
 
* grapefruit-examples
 
You can use Cabal to build each single package.
 
 
There is also a script <code>Setup.lhs</code> in the root directory of the source tree which simplifies the building process. For building Grapefruit in place, use the following command:<blockquote><p><code>runghc Setup.lhs up-to-register <em>configure-options</em> -- <em>build-options</em> -- --inplace <em>further-register-options</em></code></p></blockquote>If you rather want to install Grapefruit in some directory, use this command:<blockquote><p><code>runghc Setup.lhs up-to-install <em>configure-options</em> -- <em>build-options</em> -- <em>install-options</em></code></p></blockquote>For building the API documentation, you can issue this:<blockquote><p><code>runghc Setup.lhs haddock</code></p></blockquote>This will build the documentation for the different packages with hyperlinks to the [http://www.haskell.org/ghc/docs/latest/html/libraries/index.html Haskell Hierarchical Libraries documentation]. It will also build an index and a contents page for the complete Grapefruit library. The documentation will be placed in the directory <code>doc</code>. The entry point to the documentation will be <code>doc/grapefruit/index.html</code>. For building the documentation, you first need to build the complete library and install it or register it in place.
 
 
== Documentation ==
 
 
API documentation generated by [[Haddock]] is also on the web. You find it under http://softbase.org/grapefruit/doc/grapefruit/index.html. Note that the documentation might get a bit out of date since it is not automatically regenerated on every commit yet.
 
   
 
== Publications and talks ==
 
== Publications and talks ==
   
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See [https://grapefruit-project.org/publications-and-talks the respective list] on [https://grapefruit-project.org/ the new Grapefruit website].
* Wolfgang Jeltsch: Declarative Programming of Interactive Systems with Grapefruit. [http://www.cs.uu.nl/wiki/Stc Software Technology Colloquium of Utrecht Universiteit]. May 29, 2008.
 
** [http://www.cs.uu.nl/wiki/bin/view/Stc/DeclarativeProgrammingOfInteractiveSystemsWithGrapefruit time, place and abstract]
 
** [http://www.informatik.tu-cottbus.de/~jeltsch/research/uustc-20080529-slides.pdf slides] (including non-shown additional material)
 
   
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== Community ==
* Wolfgang Jeltsch: Improving Push-based FRP. [http://www.st.cs.ru.nl/AFP_TFP_2008/ 9th Symposium on Trends in Functional Programming]. May 26–28, 2008.
 
** [http://www.informatik.tu-cottbus.de/~jeltsch/research/tfp-2008-paper.pdf draft paper] (published in the draft proceedings)
 
** [http://www.informatik.tu-cottbus.de/~jeltsch/research/tfp-2008-slides.pdf slides] (including non-shown additional material)
 
   
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Grapefruit has a [http://projects.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/grapefruit mailing list] and a [http://trac.haskell.org/grapefruit/ project management website] where you can [http://trac.haskell.org/grapefruit/newticket report bugs], for example.
* Wolfgang Jeltsch: Funktionale GUI-Programmierung in Haskell mit Grapefruit. [http://www.iba-cg.de/haskell.html Haskell in Leipzig&nbsp;2]. July 10, 2007.
 
** [http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-8925440604853415181 video]
 
** [http://www.informatik.tu-cottbus.de/~jeltsch/research/hal-2-slides.pdf slides]
 
   
 
== Screenshots ==
 
== Screenshots ==
   
  +
Below are some screenshots from the examples of an earlier Grapefruit version. The Simple example is also available in the current version, along with several other examples not mentioned here.
Following are some screenshots from example programs using Grapefruit:
 
 
;Simple
 
;Simple
 
:Clicking on the button adds a star to the caption of the button. This doesn’t look very meaningful. However, Simple is actually a very important example since it demonstrates that feedbacks work—the output of the button is transformed and then used as the button’s input.
 
:Clicking on the button adds a star to the caption of the button. This doesn’t look very meaningful. However, Simple is actually a very important example since it demonstrates that feedbacks work—the output of the button is transformed and then used as the button’s input.

Revision as of 14:47, 10 February 2012


About

Grapefruit is a library for Functional Reactive Programming (FRP) with a focus on user interfaces. FRP makes it possible to implement reactive and interactive systems in a declarative style. With Grapefruit, user interfaces are described as networks of communicating widgets and windows. Communication is done via different kinds of signals which describe temporal behavior.

Features

Grapefruit has the following important features:

  • a push-based FRP implementation where signals
    • can be memoized using ordinary variable bindings
    • can be merged without doubling of simultaneous events
    • cannot behave differently by starting them at different times
  • a record system which makes it possible that
    • input signals can be left out to get default behavior
    • output signals can be left out to ignore uninteresting data
    • output signals can be chosen and fetched by pattern matching
  • an abstract UI implementation which can work with different backends which in turn use different toolkits to provide different look and feel with one and the same application code (At the moment, the only supported UI toolkit is GTK+ (via Gtk2Hs). We plan to support Qt in the future, making use of the HQK project’s output.)

You might be interested in a comparison of Grapefruit to other FRP libaries

Installation

Released versions

Grapefruit is released on Hackage. If you do not have special requirements, you can install Grapefruit by saying cabal install grapefruit-ui-gtk grapefruit-examples.

If you do not have installed the gtk package yet, this command will also try to install this package. However, this will fail unless gtk2hs-buildtools is already installed. See the Gtk2Hs website for further information.

Development versions

Currently, Grapefruit is undergoing a complete rewrite, which will base it on new concepts. For each part of the new Grapefruit, there is a corresponding darcs repository at http://darcs.grapefruit-project.org/package-name/main. The code of the old 0.1 branch of Grapefruit resides in a single darcs repository at http://darcs.grapefruit-project.org/monolithic/0.1.

Running the examples

You can run the examples by typing the following lines into GHCi:

import Graphics.UI.Grapefruit.Circuit
import Graphics.UI.Grapefruit.UIBackend
import Examples.Grapefruit.Example
run UIBackend mainCircuit ()

Replace Example with the name of the example to run and UIBackend with the name of the UI backend you want to use. At the moment, the only meaningful replacement for UIBackend is GTK. Possible replacements for Example are Converter, ListView, SetView, Simple, and Switching.

We do not provide ready-to-use executables since it is possible (at least in theory) to run the examples with different UI backends and an executable would be fixed to a specific backend.

Publications and talks

See the respective list on the new Grapefruit website.

Community

Grapefruit has a mailing list and a project management website where you can report bugs, for example.

Screenshots

Below are some screenshots from the examples of an earlier Grapefruit version. The Simple example is also available in the current version, along with several other examples not mentioned here.

Simple
Clicking on the button adds a star to the caption of the button. This doesn’t look very meaningful. However, Simple is actually a very important example since it demonstrates that feedbacks work—the output of the button is transformed and then used as the button’s input.
Grapefruit-screenshot-Simple.png
Codebreaker
This is a Mastermind™-like game. The Add button is enabled if and only if the input field contains a valid code and the display box is enabled if and only if the list of guesses does not contain the code chosen by the computer. These properties are described in a declarative way in the source code.
Grapefruit-screenshot-Codebreaker.png
CircuitingObjects
This example demonstrates Grapefruit’s support for animations.
Grapefruit-screenshot-CircuitingObjects.png