I guess it is close to a downstream. >From runtimes perspective it is plain Cordova. IDE actually gets the Cordova runtime directly from Apache repos just like CLI does. You can Bring Your Own Cordova too but if a distribution is too different from an Apache distribution a plugin that tells where required files should come from is needed.
For the tools, it depends on the same artifacts as plugman and CLI. Like the plugin.xml, config.xml, registry, directory structures etc. however does not use the CLI/plugman implementation but rather have its own implementation. -- Gorkem On Mon, Mar 10, 2014 at 3:38 PM, Brian LeRoux <[email protected]> wrote: > very cool! would you consider this downstream of Cordova or a flat out > fork? (neither is bad, I know sometimes the word 'fork' sounds nasty but I > view it as a healthy sign personally) > > > On Fri, Mar 7, 2014 at 3:29 PM, Gorkem Ercan <[email protected]> > wrote: > > > Hi, > > > > Some of you have seen the cordova development tools that are part of the > > JBoss tools in the past. > > If you have not, here is a quick overview [1]. Today, we (Red Hat) have > put > > out a proposal[2] > > to move most of the functionality to Eclipse foundation and continue its > > development under > > an Eclipse project named Thym. > > > > Some of you have expressed interest in the project and such a project in > > the past and > > Eclipse proposals do have section to list interested parties. This > section > > only implies that > > this is a project that is interesting for you [3] and nothing more but it > > will help the proposal. > > If you are interested and would not mind getting listed on the proposal, > > please let me know. > > > > If you have any questions regarding the project or the proposal the stage > > is yours. > > > > [1] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hbZ-wZCJ7Xs > > [2] https://projects.eclipse.org/proposals/thym > > [3] > > > > > http://waynebeaton.wordpress.com/2013/10/10/interested-parties-on-eclipse-project-proposals/ > > > > Many thanks, > > Gorkem > > >
