# Quick start ## Introduction Generally, atom-shell enables you to create desktop applications with pure JavaScript by providing a runtime with rich native APIs, you could see it as an variant of node.js runtime that focused on desktop applications instead of web server. But it doesn't mean atom-shell is a JavaScript binding to GUI libraries, instead atom-shell uses web pages as GUI, so you could also see it as a minimal Chromium browser, controlled by JavaScript. ### The browser side If you had experience with node.js web applications, you would notice that there are types of JavaScript scripts: the server side scripts and the client side scripts. The server side JavaScript, is the scrips that run on the node.js runtime, and the client side JavaScript, is the ones that run on user's browser. In atom-shell we have similar concepts, since atom-shell displays GUI by showing web pages, we would have scripts that run in the web page, and also have scripts ran by the atom-shell runtime, which created those web pages. Like node.js, we call the former ones client client scripts, and the latter one browser side scripts. In traditional node.js applications, communication between server side and client side are usually done by web sockets. In atom-shell, we have provided the [ipc](../api/renderer/ipc-renderer.md) module for browser side to client communication, and the [remote](../api/renderer/remote.md) module for easy RPC support. ### Web page and node.js Normal web pages are designed to not touch outside world, which makes them not suitable for interacting with native systems, atom-shell provides node.js APIs in web pages so you could access native resources in web pages, just like [node-webkit](https://github.com/rogerwang/node-webkit). But unlike node-webkit, you could not do native GUI related operations in web pages, instead you need to do them on the browser side by sending messages or use the easy [remote](../api/renderer/remote.md) module. ## Write your first atom-shell app Generally, an atom-shell app would be like this: ```text app/ ├── package.json ├── main.js └── index.html ``` The format of `package.json` is exactly the same with node's modules, and the script specified by the `main` field is the startup script of your app, which will run under the browser side. An example of your `package.json` is like this: ```json { "name" : "your-app", "version" : "0.1.0", "main" : "main.js" } ``` The `main.js` should create windows and handle system events, and an typical example is: ```javascript var app = require('app'); // Module to control application life. var BrowserWindow = require('browser-window'); // Module to create native browser window. // Report crashes to our server. require('crash-reporter').start(); // Keep a global reference of the window object, if you don't, the window will // be closed automatically when the javascript object is GCed. var mainWindow = null; // Quit when all windows are closed. app.on('window-all-closed', function() { if (process.platform != 'darwin') app.quit(); }); // This method will be called when atom-shell has done everything // initialization and ready for creating browser windows. app.on('ready', function() { // Create the browser window. mainWindow = new BrowserWindow({width: 800, height: 600}); // and load the index.html of the app. mainWindow.loadUrl('file://' + __dirname + '/index.html'); // Emitted when the window is closed. mainWindow.on('closed', function() { // Dereference the window object, usually you would store windows // in an array if your app supports multi windows, this is the time // when you should delete the corresponding element. mainWindow = null; }); }); ``` Finally the `index.html` is the web page you want to show: ```html