I have found it's very hard to find documentation about Gnome Shell Extensions. I found some bits on Gnome Wiki (and it's first-level links), but it's not much:

http://live.gnome.org/GnomeShell/Extensions

The problem here is GJS and it's bindings. Absolutely no documentation, got lot's of SIGSEGVs, binding is just not ready (GLib, Gio and others). The only working one is unofficial documentation generated from GIR for Seed JavaScript implementation:

http://roojs.org/seed/gir-1.2-gtk-2.0/seed/

Where to get more examples? I want read directories, files, spawn processes, open network sockets and do other stuff.

Update: Show me how to read a file line by line in GJS. According Google this is not possible. Thanks.

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@Anonymouse I'm still on Gnome 2.x. All the new (backwards) WMs really don't like dual displays, for one thing. – JamWaffles Nov 28 '11 at 20:10
Granted, when you are running it on a tablet, Gnome3 may be nicer to use. – Anony-Mousse Nov 28 '11 at 20:12
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2 Answers

up vote 6 down vote accepted

GNOME Shell uses GJS, not Seed. There are some differences among both of them, and it might explain why you are having problems.

With GOBject Introspection you can read the documentation for the original library and adapt the signature of every method/function to the language you are using.

In your particular case, for files, networking, etc. you might want to check GIO. You can check the Platform Overview to check what else is available. You also can check some examples (not extensions, though) in JavaScript.

At last but not least, very soon a website with extension will be launched.

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Thanks, I know it, but the website is new information for me. – lzap Nov 29 '11 at 7:57
Okay marking as answered. No new information for me, but maybe for others. Thanks :-) – lzap Nov 30 '11 at 8:52
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Well, supposedly, with Gnome3, you have a pretty uniform API across various programming languages, that is generated from the same GIR files. So you should (at least in theory) be able to retrieve all the API - I hope with documentation - from the GObject Introspection. And the other way round, you should be able to transform example code from another language into JavaScript for this API easily.

Theoretically. I avoid JavaScript where possible, developing a desktop application in JavaScript is the last I would do.

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Some parts are not introspectable, but thanks. – lzap Nov 28 '11 at 20:24
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