Hugh Willson cd5405437c Visually notify of uncaught exceptions breaking client tests (#9034)
* Visually notify of uncaught exceptions breaking client tests

These changes add a global `window.onerror` event handler
to the `test-in-browser` package, to catch any previously
uncaught exceptions. When uncaught exceptions are found,
an alert box is displayed above the test results table.
This should help notify developers of hidden uncaught
exceptions that could be preventing client tests from
running.

Fixes #4979.

* Bump the test-in-browser package version
2017-08-22 20:52:30 -04:00
2017-08-11 16:20:07 +03:00
2016-06-16 19:13:25 +02:00
2017-07-27 13:18:17 +03:00
2015-07-31 10:56:11 -07:00
2016-10-04 18:34:28 -04:00
2016-05-03 14:47:02 -07:00
2017-06-07 16:18:11 +03:00

Meteor

TravisCI Status CircleCI Status

Meteor is an ultra-simple environment for building modern web applications.

With Meteor you write apps:

  • in pure JavaScript
  • that send data over the wire, rather than HTML
  • using your choice of popular open-source libraries

Try the getting started tutorial.

Next, read the guide or the reference documentation at http://docs.meteor.com/.

Quick Start

On Windows, the installer can be found at https://www.meteor.com/install.

On Linux/macOS, use this line:

curl https://install.meteor.com/ | sh

Create a project:

meteor create try-meteor

Run it:

cd try-meteor
meteor

Developer Resources

Building an application with Meteor?

Interested in helping or contributing to Meteor? These resources will help:

We are hiring! Visit meteor.io/jobs to learn more about working full-time on the Meteor project.

Uninstalling Meteor

Aside from a short launcher shell script, Meteor installs itself inside your home directory. To uninstall Meteor, run:

rm -rf ~/.meteor/
sudo rm /usr/local/bin/meteor

On Windows, just run the uninstaller from your Control Panel.

Description
No description provided
Readme MIT 202 MiB
Languages
JavaScript 91.1%
TypeScript 3.9%
Shell 0.9%
Java 0.7%
Swift 0.7%
Other 2.5%