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Apps are Julia packages that are intended to be run as "standalone programs" (by e.g. typing the name of the app in the terminal possibly together with some arguments or flags/options). This is in contrast to most Julia packages that are used as "libraries" and are loaded by other files or in the Julia REPL.
Apps are Julia packages that are intended to be run as "standalone programs" (by e.g. typing the name of the app in the terminal possibly together with some arguments or flags/options). This is in contrast to most Julia packages that are used as "libraries" and are loaded by other files or in the Julia REPL.
A Julia app is structured similar to a standard Julia library with the following additions:
A @main entry point in the package module (see the Julia help on @main for details)
An [apps] section in the Project.toml file listing the executable names that the package provides.
A very simple example of an app that prints the reversed input arguments would be:
# src/MyReverseApp.jl
module MyReverseApp
function (@main)(ARGS)
for arg in ARGS
print(stdout, reverse(arg), " ")
end
return
end
end # module
# Project.toml
# standard fields here
[apps]
reverse = {}
The empty table {} is to allow for giving metadata about the app.
After installing this app one could run:
$ ~/.julia/bin/reverse some input string
emos tupni gnirts
directly in the terminal. See the following link to learn more:
npx claudepluginhub atelierarith/atelier-arith-julia-development-skills --plugin aa-jlGuides creation, editing, and verification of skills for AI coding agents using test-driven development with subagent scenarios. Use when authoring or debugging skills.