This is done by showing a dialog containing an <input type="file">
through which the user can 'upload' a save file - though, of course,
the 'upload' doesn't go to any HTTP server, but only into the mind of
the Javascript running in the same browser.
It would be even nicer to support drag-and-drop as an alternative UI
for getting the save file into the browser, but that isn't critical to
getting the first version of this feature out of the door.
This is done by getting midend_serialise to produce the complete
saved-game file as an in-memory string buffer, and then encoding that
into a data: URI which we provide to the user as a hyperlink in a
dialog box. The hyperlink has the 'download' attribute, which means
clicking on it should automatically offer to save the file, and also
lets me specify a not-too-silly default file name.
Rather than design an ersatz 'window frame' surrounding the puzzle
canvas, I've simply overlaid the resize handle on the corner of the
puzzle itself (canvas or status bar, depending on whether the latter
exists), trusting that all games in my collection provide a reasonable
border within their drawing area. (OS X already does this with its
resize handle, so it's not as if there's no precedent.)
Unlike the desktop versions, I control the resize behaviour completely
in this environment, so I can constrain the canvas to only ever be
sensible sizes with no dead space round the edges (and, in particular,
preserve the aspect ratio).
Right-clicking the resize handle will restore the puzzle's default
tile size. I had intended to implement a maximise-to-browser-window
button too, but was annoyingly foiled by scrollbars - if you maximise
to the current window width, and as a result the text below the puzzle
scrolls off the bottom, then a vertical scrollbar appears and eats
into the width you just maximised to. Gah.
[originally from svn r9822]
applets, here's an alternative webification in Javascript, using
Emscripten in asm.js mode (so that as browsers incorporate asm.js
optimisation, the game generation should run really fast).
[originally from svn r9781]