# Getting Started with N1 on Windows ## Dependencies 1. **Visual Studio**: You must have Visual Studio installed to build native extensions. See the notes about Visual Studio below if you encounter compilation errors. 1. **Node**: Node 0.10, 0.11, 0.12, and 4.x supported 1. **Python 2.7**: The `python` command must be on your `PATH` and must point to Python 2.7 (not 3.x) 1. **Git**: The `git` command must be on your `PATH` ## Building git clone https://github.com/nylas/N1.git cd N1 script\bootstrap.cmd ## Running electron\electron.exe . --dev # Common Issues: While `script\bootstrap.cmd` is designed to work out of the box, we have to compile a few native extensions via node-gyp and expect certain programs to be available on your `PATH`. If `script\bootstrap.cmd` fails due to a compilation error, it is likely due to a Visual Studio problem. ## Visual Studio There are now several versions of Visual Studio. Node-gyp is designed to detect the current version installed on your system. If you are using Visual Studio 2015, you must be using a newer version of Node. If during compilation, node-gyp looks in the wrong place for headers, you can explicitly set the version of Visual Studio you want it to use by setting the `GYP_MSVS_VERSION` environment variable to the year of your Visual Studio version. Valid values are `2015`, `2013`, `2013e`, `2012`, etc. (`e` stands for "express"). The full set of values are [here](https://github.com/nodejs/node/blob/v4.2.1/tools/gyp/pylib/gyp/MSVSVersion.py#L411) ## Node & Npm We only use your system's Node to bootstrap `apm`. Once we have `apm` installed, your system's Node no longer matters and we install remaining packages with `apm`. However, since bootstrapping this requires native extensions to be built, we need a version of `node` and `node-gyp` that is compatible with your current Visual Studio setup. There is a small chance that depending on where you setup N1, you will get an error about file paths being too long. If this happens, you will need to manually install npm 3.x (npm 2.x comes shipped with most Node installations). Instead of running the whole `script\bootstrap.cmd` script to test this, you can `cd` into the `\build` folder, and from there run `npm install`. Only the `build\package.json` modules need your system's Node. ## Python The `python` executable must be on your `PATH`. Depending on how you installed Python, you may need to ensure the `python.exe` can be found.