h1. MiddleClass Lua OOP classes usually end being: * multi-file libraries, too difficult to understand * very small libraries, not very powerful Middleclass attemps to be a mid-sized library (~120 lines of code, on a single file), with clean, easy to understand code, and yet powerful enough to be used in most cases. h1. Documentation See the "github wiki page":https://github.com/kikito/middleclass/wiki for examples & documentation. h1. Features * ~120 lines of code * top-level Object class * all methods are virtual * instance.class returns the instance's class * @Class.name@ returns the class name (a string) * @Class.superclass@ returns its super class * Subclassing: ** @class(name)@ creates a subclass of @Object@ ** @class(name, Superclass)@ creates a subclass of the class @SuperClass@ ** @SuperClass:subclass(name)@ also creates a subclass of the class @SuperClass@ * Instantiation: ** Classes can define an @initialize@ method for initializing new instances. They can accept an arbitrary number of params. ** Instances are created by doing @Class:new(params)@ or also @Class(params)@ ** SuperClass' methods can be used by using this syntax: @SuperClass.initialize(self, params)@. * support for Lua metamethods: just define a method called @__tostring@, @__add@, etc. and your instances will be able to use it. * Mixins: ** A very simple mechanism for sharing functionality among a group of classes that are otherwise non-related. ** Mixins are just simple lua tables with functions inside them. ** @Class:include(mixin)@ will copy the function definitions of @mixin@ to @class@ ** If @mixin@ contains a function, called @included@, that function will be invoked right after the functions have been copied. It allows for modifying the class more profoundly. * The function @instanceOf(class, instance)@ returns @true@ if @instance@ is an instance of the class @Class@ * The function @subclassOf(Superclass, Class)@ returns @true@ if @Class@ is a subclass of @SuperClass@ * The function @includes(mixin, Class)@ returns @true@ if @Class@ (or one of its superclasses) includes @mixin@. Features left out: * metaclasses * classes are not Objects (instances are) * simulating a 'super' keyword (for performance concerns) h1. Installation using git (recommended) The easiest way is creating a clone using git:
git clone git://github.com/kikito/middleclass.git
This will create a folder called @middleclass@. You can require it using:
require 'middleclass.init'
If you have @?/init.lua@ included in your @package.path@ variable, you can remove the @.init@ part. If you ever want to update middleclass, you can use the following commands:
cd your/path/to/middleclass
git pull origin master
Git will automatically update middleclass for you. h1. Manual download Middleclass can be directly downloaded using "the github downloader":https://github.com/kikito/middleclass/archives/master You will not be able to get automatic updates with that method, but your folder size will be smaller. As an alternative, you can directly download "middleclass.lua":https://github.com/kikito/middleclass/raw/master/middleclass.lua and "BSD-LICENSE.txt":https://github.com/kikito/middleclass/raw/master/BSD-LICENSE.txt and put them in your project. In that case, you will have to require it doing something like this (will vary if you put middleclass.lua inside a folder):
require 'middleclass'
(This assumes you have @?.lua@ in your @package.path@, which is the default) You will have to put BSD-LICENSE.txt somewhere in your folder, or copy-paste it inside of your own license.txt file. h1. middleclass-extras This library has a companion lib that adds a lot of interesting functionality to your objects. Give it a look at "middleclass-extras":https://github.com/kikito/middleclass-extras If you are looking for @MindState@ (now called @Stateful@), it's over there, too. h1. Specs You may find the specs for this library in "middleclass-specs":https://github.com/kikito/middleclass-specs