# Creating a plugin
This guide will help you through creating a plugin for Dragonroll
## Downloading the example plugin
The quickest way to start a plugin is starting from the example plugin template that you can find in [this]() repository. Every Dragonroll plugin has the following file structure:
```tree
/your-plugin/
├── plugin.json
├── client
│ └── main.js
│ └── ...
├── backend
│ └── main.js
│ └── ...
├── locales
│ └── en-US.json
│ └── ...
└── public
└── icon.png
└── ...
```
- The `plugin.json` contains basic information about your plugin, and also the entrypoints that Dragonroll will use to load and initialize the plugin
- The `client` folder contains all the code of your plugin that is relative to the client
- The `backend` folder contains all the code that is relative to the server
- The `locales` folder contains the translation files for your plugin
- The `public` folder contains all the media that will be publicly available for your plugin client
## The plugin.json file
Your `plugin.json` file defines important information about your plugin, like its name, package, authors, entrypoints, and other information
**Important**: The `package` field must be identical to the name of the folder containing your entire plugin
> `plugin.json`
```json
{
"package": "your-plugin",
"name": "My custom plugin",
"description": "This is my first custom plugin",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Aran Roig"
}
],
"version": "1.0",
"client": {
"entrypoint": "main.js"
},
"backend": {
"entrypoint": "main.js"
}
}
```
## Entrypoints
When Dragonroll registers a plugin, it calls the `Main` method of the file specified in the entrypoint field inside the `plugin.json`, so if you don't export a function with that name your plugin won't load. Dragonroll passes its entire API through the main method
> `client/main.js`
> `backend/main.js`
```js main.js
function Main(Api){
console.log("Hello World!");
}
export { Main };
```
In the client entrypoint, the `Api` variable will be a `ClientApi` object. In the backend entrypoint, the `Api` will be instead a `BackendApi` object.
If you want to make the `Api` object accessible throught your plugin files, you need to export it and then import `main.js` using relative paths:
> `client/main.js`
> `backend/main.js`
```js main.js
let Api;
function Main(api){
Api = api;
console.log("Hello World!");
}
export { Main, Api };
```
> `client/otherfile.js`
```js
import { Api } from './main.js'
// Do whatever
```
## Creating a window
In Dragonroll, windows are managed in a data-oriented approach, each window has a `type` that defines what view corresponds to it, and then it has an `id` to identify every window. These two fields are mandatory for creating a window, and `id` must be unique. For ensuring that `type` and `id` won't collide with other plugins, the Dragonroll Api handles a prefix with the name of your package for all the ids you set.
### Window view
You can spawn Dragonroll internal windows or also you can create your own type with the `registerWindow` method. First, you need to create a view inside `client/views` folder:
> `ExampleWindow.vue`
```vue
Hello window world!