enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Node.js - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nodejs

    Node.js is a cross-platform, open-source JavaScript runtime environment that can run on Windows, Linux, Unix, macOS, and more. Node.js runs on the V8 JavaScript engine, and executes JavaScript code outside a web browser. Node.js lets developers use JavaScript to write command line tools and for server-side scripting.

  3. JavaScript engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JavaScript_engine

    V8 from Google is the most used JavaScript engine. Google Chrome and the many other Chromium-based browsers use it, as do applications built with CEF, Electron, or any other framework that embeds Chromium. Other uses include the Node.js and Deno runtime systems. SpiderMonkey is developed by Mozilla for use in Firefox and its forks.

  4. Mocha (JavaScript framework) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mocha_(JavaScript_framework)

    Mocha is a JavaScript test framework for Node.js programs, featuring browser support, asynchronous testing, test coverage reports, and use of any assertion library. [ 1 ] Assertion libraries

  5. Grunt (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grunt_(software)

    Grunt is a JavaScript task runner, a tool used to automatically perform frequent tasks such as minification, compilation, unit testing, and linting. It uses a command-line interface to run custom tasks defined in a file (known as a Gruntfile). Grunt was created by Ben Alman and is written in Node.js. It is distributed via npm. As of October ...

  6. Node-RED - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Node-RED

    A Node-RED flow describes the connection and sequencing of various input, output, and processing nodes within the Node-RED platform. Each node within a flow performs a unique and specific task. When data is transmitted to a node, the node processes it according to its designated function, before passing it on to the subsequent node in the flow.

  7. Flow-based programming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flow-based_programming

    Flow-based programming defines applications using the metaphor of a "data factory". It views an application not as a single, sequential process, which starts at a point in time, and then does one thing at a time until it is finished, but as a network of asynchronous processes communicating by means of streams of structured data chunks, called "information packets" (IPs).

  8. gulp.js - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gulpfile

    Task-runners like gulp and Grunt are built on Node.js rather than npm because the basic npm scripts are inefficient when executing multiple tasks. Even though some developers prefer npm scripts because they can be simple and easy to implement, there are numerous ways where gulp and Grunt seem to have an advantage over each other, and the default provided scripts. [11]

  9. Ember.js - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EmberJS

    JSON API has server library implementations for PHP, Node.js, Ruby, Python, Go, .NET and Java. [41] Connecting to a Java-Spring-based server is also documented. [42] The first stable version of Ember Data (labeled 1.13 to align with Ember itself) was released on June 18 June 2015. [43]