This repository contains the source of "The Cairo Programming Language" book, a comprehensive documentation of the Cairo 1 programming language. This documentation is your go-to resource for mastering Cairo, created and maintained by the Starknet community. You can read the book online.
-
Rust related packages:
cargo install mdbook mdbook-i18n-helpers
-
Host machine packages:
- Install gettext for translations, usually available with regular package manager:
sudo apt install gettext
.
- Install gettext for translations, usually available with regular package manager:
-
Clone this repository.
-
Install mdbook-cairo for Cairo code blocks
cargo install --path mdbook-cairo
All the Markdown files MUST be edited in english. To work locally in english:
-
Start a local server with
mdbook serve
and visit localhost:3000 to view the book. You can use the--open
flag to open the browser automatically:mdbook serve --open
. -
Make changes to the book and refresh the browser to see the changes.
-
Open a PR with your changes.
This book is targetting international audience, and aims at being gradually translated in several languages.
All files in the src
directory MUST be written in english. This ensures that all the translation files can be
auto-generated and updated by translators.
To work with translations, those are the steps to update the translated content:
-
Run a local server for the language you want to edit:
./translations.sh es
for instance. If no language is provided, the script will only extract translations from english. -
Open the translation file you are interested in
po/es.po
for instance. You can also use editors like poedit to help you on this task. -
When you are done, you should only have changes into the
po/xx.po
file. Commit them and open a PR. The PR must stars withi18n
to let the maintainers know that the PR is only changing translation.
The translation work is inspired from Comprehensive Rust repository.
The current book has a mdbook backend to extract Cairo programs from the markdown sources. Currently, for each program it test two things: if it compiles and if it adheres to the cairo-format
coding style. You can run this locally and test if a Cairo program you have written in the book passes these tests.
The mdbook-cairo backend is working as following:
-
It takes every code blocks in the markdown source and parse all of them.
-
Code blocks with a main function
fn main()
are extracted into Cairo programs. -
The extracted programs are named based on the chapter they belong to, and a consecutive number of the
fn main()
found in the chapter. -
If you have a code block with a
fn main()
function that you know does not compile, you can indicate it by adding thedoes_not_compile
attribute to the code block, like this:```rust,does_not_compile fn main() { } ```
This main function will still count in the consecutive number of
fn main()
in the chapter file, but will not be extracted into a Cairo program. -
Alternatively, if you want to disable the format check using
cairo-format
, you can add theignore_format
attribute to the code block, like this:```rust,ignore_format fn main() { } ```
To run the CI locally, ensure that you are at the root of the repository (same directory of this README.md
file), and run:
bash mdbook-cairo/scripts/cairo_local_verify.sh
Fricoben 🤔 🔍 📆 |
Mathieu 🤔 💻 🧑🏫 👀 📆 |
Nadai 🌍 |
glihm 💻 🔧 |
Clément Walter 👀 |
V.O.T 💻 |
Pia 💻 📝 |
cryptonerdcn 🌍 |