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The Rhino project was started at Netscape in 1997. At the time, Netscape was planning to produce a version of Netscape Navigator written fully in Java and so it needed an implementation of JavaScript written in Java. When Netscape stopped work on Javagator, as it was called, the
Project-product name JavaScript engine Server platform(s) Comments Alfresco: Rhino: Any Java servlet container and standalone. Has JavaScript API that allows web scripts to create, access, delete, and manipulate data in the main Alfresco repository Apache Sling: Rhino: Any Java servlet container and standalone
HTML and CSS can be used in combination to mark up and style information. The webpage can be modified by JavaScript to dynamically display (and allow the user to interact with) the new information. The built-in XMLHttpRequest object is used to execute Ajax on webpages, allowing websites to load content onto the screen without refreshing the ...
Dojo Toolkit, an Open Source DHTML toolkit written in JavaScript. modified BSD license or the Academic Free License: Ext JS, a library that extends Prototype, Jquery and YUI until version 1.0. Since version 1.1 a standalone Ajax framework. GPLv3 or proprietary Backbone.js, loosely based on the Model–View–Controller application design ...
Nashorn is a JavaScript engine developed in the Java programming language originally by Oracle and later by the OpenJDK Community. It relies on the support for dynamically typed languages on the Java Platform (JSR 292) (a concept first realized in the experimental Da Vinci Machine and a standard part of Java 7 and
With server-side rendering, static HTML can be sent from the server to the client, and client-side JavaScript then makes the web page dynamic by attaching event handlers to the HTML elements in a process called hydration. Examples of frameworks that support server-side rendering are Next.js, Nuxt.js, Angular, and React.
JSR 223: Scripting for the Java Platform Specification Request; Roth, Gregor (November 20, 2007). "Scripting on the Java platform". JavaWorld; O'Conner, John (July 2006). "Scripting for the Java Platform". Sun Microsystems; Tremblett, Paul (March 8, 2009). "JSR 223: Scripting for the Java Platform". Dr.
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