Epaath image customization
How to pimp a fresh and clean Etoys image to a luxurious Epaati image
For this procedure it's helpful to have the etoys-migration-files directory handy. This directory is for the moment only situated on one of the OLE Nepal internal servers (Om's server). We've got a very slow connection to the outside world, so putting it on an external server isn't very practical at the moment. If you, as an external developer, want to work with etoys, you can pull from the soon to be initialized Subversion repository. If it's not there yet, mail us, and we'll find a way.
What follows is a step by step instruction:
Get the latest Etoys image
That would be: EtoysV3.sources and etoys-dev-3.0.zip
Place EtoysV3.sources in the directory where you've got SqueakV3.sources, and unzip the etoys-dev-3.0.zip to a directory of your preference.
Or just use the stock Etoys image for now. It doesn't really matter.
Install Monticello
This is not a straight line procedure, since the standard Etoys image has diverged a bit from the main squeak line. For now see the 'Installing Monticello on your Etoys image' section in Etoys Tips and Tricks.
Install the latest OLE Monticello package
Open a Monticello browser and click +Package. Enter 'OLE' and accept. Then with the (empty) OLE package being highlighted, click +Repository and select 'http'. Change the location into 'http://squeaksource.com/OLE' and leave user and password be. Both should say 'squeak'. Accept. Highlight the repository and click Open. Wait for a bit and a new window should open. Select the latest OLE version from the pane on the right and click 'load'.
And now you should have a new and fresh OLE lib installed.
Local patches
Go to the changesets directory in the etoys-migration-files directory, and file them in.
Devanagari fonts
Go to the devanagari-fonts directory in the etoys-migration-files directory. Drag the Devnew.ttf file into your etoys image. Drag a textmorph from your supply-bin, conjure up it's halo, select DevanagariNew and select a point size.
Then again conjure up the halo, select the DevanagariNew font and select 'new size'. Fill in 60, 72, 100, 200, 300 or 400, and repeat the process to add the rest. If you are thrown into the debugger, that's to be expected. We should file a bug report for that if it's not already done.
Then execute:
TTCFont registerAll
As from [1]. We should still submit a proper patch for this.
And we're done.
Note that in general Devanagari can't be rendered properly at the moment. The stuff we did in the preceding section is only meant for rendering of Devanagari letters. The latest news is that someone from the olpc-etoys dev list was working on it. Need to investigate.
Also there's some way to render text properly by importing text from some application programmatically. Look through the olpc etoys mailing list, topic 'Squeak VM status concerning language encodings' for further details.
sounds
Just drag all the files from the common-sounds folder under etoys-migration-files into the etoys image. Answer 'save' at the dialog, and accept with the suggested name.
We play all sounds as wavs at the moment. Preferably they would probably be something like ogg files to save mem.
custom classes
We should also load a couple of .st files that haven't been integrated into the OLE Monticello package yet. Just file in all files in dir 'class-files' under etoys-migration-files.
preferences
Some preferences should also be adjusted. Some are automatically activated with setting the image into production mode which is described below.
The only one we for now still do manually is the preference variable warnIfChangesFileReadOnly, which we set to false (by searching for the variable in world menu > help > preferences).
XO Game Collection
We load the 'XO Game collection.*.pr' (whichever is the latest version, if there are more) project file into the image.
Setting Image to deploy|author mode|user mode
If you're going to use the image for developing, click the world to get the world menu, select OLE and select author mode. If you want to see how a user would experience, select 'user mode'. User mode toggles a few values so users don't get bothered by all the options that developers get. If you think that's a good idea? That's another question.
If you're actually going to use the image for deployment in Nepali schools, select deploy, and also select toggle flaps, to hide the flaps that the OLE developers often use to store objects off-screen.
Save image
Save that image!!
and we're done.