At 22:52 +0100 2006.05.29, Dominic Mitchell wrote:
>JavaScript -- the new respectable face of the web. Until you want to do
>anything with it outside of a browser. There's apparently lots of choice:
>
>* Rhino -- except that loading a full JVM to run a few lines of
>JavaScript code is living using a JCB to swat a fly.
>* SpiderMonkey -- Mozilla's JavaScript engine, ripped out and zombie-like.
>* njs -- so dormant it's like Rip van Winkle.
>* WSH -- yep, that'll work really well on my mac.
>
>All I wanted to do was run JSLint at the command line. Surely it can't
>be that hard? Yet SpiderMonkey has no I/O capabilities at all. Rhino
>has ReadFile(), but it's Java and slow. njs couldn't even parse the
>bloody jslint source, let alone try providing some input to it.
>
>That's OK, I'll work around this by using JavaScript::SpiderMonkey and a
>small bit of Perl. Except that appears to hang completely when run
>against the simplest function(). What a steaming pile of donkey turds.
[pu...@bourque js]$ cd /usr/local/src/js/src/Darwin_DBG.OBJ
[pu...@bourque js]$ cat > test.js
var x = { a: 1, b: 26 };
print(x.b + x.a);
[pu...@bourque js]$ ./js test.js
27
[pu...@bourque js]$ ./js
js> var x = { a: 1, b: 26 };
js> x.b + x.a;
27
Dunno if this helps you ... but I was able to compile SpiderMonkey for Mac
and run it on the command line without much difficulty.
--
Chris Nandor [email protected] http://pudge.net/
Open Source Technology Group [email protected] http://ostg.com/