processing

Source code for the Processing Core and Development Environment (PDE)

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Since the release of Processing 3.5.4 in January 2020, development has moved to a new repository.

Using a 4.0 release (even an alpha or beta version) is recommended if you find an issue. To avoid confusion, this repo will remain open at least until a 4.0 release is the default download at https://processing.org/download. We chose to move to a new repository so that we could clean out old files accumulated over the last 20 years.

Processing

This is the official source code for the Processing Development Environment (PDE),
the “core” and the libraries that are included with the download.

I’ve found a bug!
Let us know here (after first checking if someone has already posted a similar problem).
If it’s a reference, web site, or examples issue, take that up with folks here.
There are also separate locations for Android Mode, or the Video and Sound libraries.
The processing.js project is not affiliated with us, but you can find their issue tracker here.

Locked Issues
Where possible, I’ve started locking issues once resolved. This helps reduce the amount of noise from folks adding to an issue that’s been closed for years. Because this project has existed for a long time and we have thousands of closed issues, lots of them may sound similar to an issue you’re having. But if there’s a new problem, it’ll be missed if it’s lost in a comment added to an already closed issue. I don’t like to lock issues because it cuts off conversation, but it’s better than legitimate problems being missed. Once an issue has been resolved for 30 days, it will automatically lock.

That processing-bugs fella is suspicious.
The issues list has been imported from Google Code, so there are many spurious references
amongst them since the numbering changed. Basically, any time you see references to
changes made by processing-bugs, it may be somewhat suspect.
Over time this will clean itself up as bugs are fixed and new issues are added from within GitHub.
Help speed this process along by helping us!

Please help.
The instructions for building the source are here.
Please help us fix problems, and if you’re submitting code, following the style guidelines helps save me a lot of time.

And finally…
Someday we’ll also fix all these bugs, throw together hundreds of unit tests, and get rich off all this stuff that we’re giving away for free. But not today.

So in the meantime, I ask for your patience,
participation,
and patches.

Ben Fry, 20 January 2019