Sure, if you have a window object you can call `tools(w)` from Julia to
open the dev tools. If you end up using Blink.jl I'd love to hear about it!

On 6 January 2015 at 11:21, Eric Forgy <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi Mike,
>
> This is awesome!
>
> Please forgive a question before doing my homework, but is there a way to
> access a javascript console in the window?
>
> I think I can use this for something I'm working on. I almost have a basic
> javascript/d3 version of GUIDE working together with my own homegrown data
> visualizations for building GUIs in Chrome, so this is a very welcome gift
> :)
>
> I was looking into node-webkit, but this looks maybe better :)
>
> Happy New Year!
>
> Best regards,
> Eric
>
> PS: Here is a screenshot. I usually run things in the console.
>
>
> <https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-68UfNA8pby0/VKvEd_n8hFI/AAAAAAAAAIA/KnReGRopd70/s1600/Screen%2BShot%2B2015-01-06%2Bat%2B7.17.29%2Bpm.png>
>
>
>
>
> On Monday, January 5, 2015 10:30:33 PM UTC+8, Mike Innes wrote:
>>
>> Hello Julians,
>>
>> I have a shiny late Christmas present for you, complete with Julia-themed
>> wrapping.
>>
>> Blink.jl <https://github.com/one-more-minute/Blink.jl> wraps Chrome to
>> enable web-based GUIs. It's very primitive at the moment, but as a proof of
>> concept it includes BlinkDisplay, which will display graphics like Gadfly
>> plots in a convenient popup window (matplotlib style).
>>
>> Shashi has some great ideas for ways to control HTML from Julia, and
>> hopefully in future we'll have more nice things like matrix/data frame
>> explorers and other graphical tools.
>>
>> (Incidentally, I'd also appreciate any feedback on the display system
>> I've made to enable this, since I'm hoping to propose it to replace Base's
>> current one in future)
>>
>> Anyway, let me know if this is useful to you and/or there are any
>> problems.
>>
>> – Mike
>>
>

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