{

A simple step by step1.

1. Download the Silverlight DLR SDK

2. Map the binaries (the folder with Chiron2 et. al.)  in your PATH Environment variable.

3. Download this starter template.

4. Run chiron /w from the command line in the directory of the starter.



a) Make sure you're in the correct folder
b) The command is
chiron /w
c) You'll get a message that Chiron is serving at http://localhost:2060a

5. Navigate to http://localhost:2060 and hit index.html to see what's up.



 
The starter3 should make it easy to get up and running. Open the app.py and app.xaml files and you will be able to modify the xaml and write code to customize it into your own creation.

1. Michael Foord aka Voidspace is the guy when it comes to IronPython. He wrote a book on it. He has a "getting started" tutorial that is much more extensive if you want more details. His tutorial isn't as terse so I thought I'd write this one for people who just want a step by step before poking around. There are other people like JimmyThinking who offer a lot of help to beginners but lean towards IronRuby.

2. The name Chiron for a tool makes me think about a few things: first, being born out of time since most BigCo shops today name computers and tools in a hollow, mechanistic fashion. In the salad days of computing on Unix, tools had cool names like ed or yacc. The second thing I think is that Dmitri (and I'm sure there's an "et. al.") must be a cool, interdisciplinary fellow to come up with a name like that.

3. The exchange in the sample is from Swahili classes at Rusinga Primary School in Nairobi.

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Comments

gefilte
When you said "in 5 steps" I was hoping for interpretive dance. C'est la vie.