Nuclide is a collection of packages for Atom to provide IDE-like functionality for a variety of programming languages and technologies.
To install a pre-built version of Nuclide, install the
nuclide-installer
package in Atom.
This package will ensure that you have the full set of Nuclide packages.
If you have never installed an Atom package before, follow the package installation instructions from the Atom Flight Manual to do it through the Atom UI, or run the following from the command line:
apm install nuclide-installer
The first time you start Atom after installing the nuclide-installer
package, you will have to wait
a few seconds for the installer to determine which Nuclide packages it needs to install or update.
To determine whether the installer worked, go to the Settings view in Atom and select the Packages
tab. From there, filter your installed packages by nuclide-
and verify you see the packages listed
in the next section.
Nuclide contains the following Atom packages:
nuclide-flow
Adds support for Flow. Ifflow
is on your$PATH
, then opening.js
files with the/* @flow */
pragma under a directory with a.flowconfig
should expose information from Flow directly in Atom.nuclide-hack
Adds support for Hack by providing autocomplete and jump-to-definition functionality. Nuclide also includes anuclide-language-hack
package so that Hack files are syntax highlighted correctly.nuclide-hg-repository
Local changes to files in a Mercurial repository will be reflected in Atom's file tree and gutter UI as Atom does natively for Git repositories.nuclide-remote-projects
adds support for remote development. See thenuclide-server
package for more information on setting up the server thatnuclide-remote-projects
will talk to so you can edit your foreign files in Nuclide. Note that this package is used in concert withnuclide-file-tree
so that both local and remote files can be browsed from a familiar UI.nuclide-quick-open
provides an advanced file search UI with segmented search results.
Most developers choose to maintain individual Node and Atom packages in their own repositories. Because Nuclide is composed of so many packages, we chose to organize all of its code in a single repository rather than across a multitude of repositories. As such, this repository is organized as follows:
pkg/
Source code for Nuclide packages.scripts/
Utilities for developing and deploying Nuclide packages.
If you want to experiment with modifications to Nuclide's code, we recommend that you
build it from source. (Note that when you build from source, an inert instance of the
nuclide-installer
package will be installed, effectively disabling autoupdate for Nuclide packages.
If you want to return to an ordinary installation of Nuclide, run apm install nuclide-installer
and restart Atom to get it back.)
System Requirements
- Python 2.6 or later.
- Atom v0.209.0 or later.
node
,npm
,apm
, andgit
must be on your$PATH
. (Node must be v0.12.0 or later.)- Watchman version 3.2 or above. It must
be in
/usr/local/bin/
or in your $PATH. Note that Watchman is not currently available on Windows (June 2015). Without Watchman, Nuclide will lose some functionality: for instance, in thehg-repository
,server
, andquick-open
packages.
Build and install Nuclide
Run the following command from the root of the repository:
./scripts/dev/setup
or if you are on Windows:
python scripts\dev\setup
If you see any errors, try running the setup script again with the --verbose
flag to get more
debugging information.
The setup script will fetch the appropriate dependencies from npm and
perform any necessary build steps. When complete, you should see several nuclide-
packages in your ~/.atom/packages
directory. Starting Atom after running ./scripts/dev/setup
for the first time may be a little slow because of the large number of Babel files that
need to be transpiled. (The results of transpilation are cached for future use.
You can see how many files were transpiled from Timecop.)
Some users have reported errors when re-running ./script/dev/setup
. (You should run this script
whenever you add or remove a package, or change the dependencies in a package.json
file.)
Although it should not be necessary, running git clean -xfd
to clear out stale files has fixed the
problem for a number of developers. (On Windows, sometimes git clean -xfd
has to be run several
times to successfully delete the junctions created by the setup script.) If all else fails, you may
want to create a fresh clone of Nuclide and run the setup script again from there.
Once you have everything set up, read the packages overview to learn more about how to develop Nuclide.