On 08/03/2016 20:28, Matt Maier wrote:
Riiiiiiiight...except that I can't use "view page source" to see any
Livecode because what's delivered to the browser is either html, css, or
javascript, correct?
Correct.
  So the Livecode "source" is replaced by its own
output, which maintains the mystery.
Yes.

There are several small tutorials scattered around, but where can I see
actual websites that run on Livecode? Even the on-rev.com examples don't
actually provide the *.lc files. All I can see there are the isolated
Livecode scripts and the static page delivered to the browser in html.
Unfortunately I don't know of any concrete examples. There may well be some - sadly the Livecode samples and examples are in too many places, and it can be hard to track things down.

I have a number of (small-ish) websites all done with Livecode - but none of them is decent enough quality to want to make them public; however, I'd be happy to share them off--list if you want (with a repeated warning that I am not really happy with any of them :-)
Feel free to look at
http://melaniechmielewska.co.uk/
or
http://karenliversedge.com           (uses revIgniter)
or
http://kilmelford.com


revIgniter is a good framework - and it comes with a lot of code, including e.g. login / authentication samples - so there is a lot there, but it is a big learning curve.


When you say "use Livecode for the client" do you mean a desktop standalone
or the new HTML5 standalone?
In this case I'm sure Richard meant desktop standalone, sonce he's been an advocate for that for some years. I'm sure once HTML5 standalones become smoething we can deploy, many of the advantages of desktop LC standalones will be available via that path as well.

-- Alex.

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