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In February 2017, Kamil Myśliwiec was inspired by Angular to build a Node.js-based framework with an architecture based on Socket.IO and Express. [1] [3] According to the NestJS GitHub repository, the first tagged release, version 4.4.0, was on November 23, 2017.
The goal was to enable a structure that would be more receptive to community input, including the updating of io.js with the latest Google V8 JavaScript engine releases, diverging from Node.js's approach at that time. [22] The Node.js Foundation, formed to reconcile Node.js and io.js under a unified banner, was announced in February 2015. [23]
Decoupling: Reduces dependencies between classes, making the code more modular and maintainable. Flexibility: Allows for more targeted implementations of interfaces. Avoids unnecessary dependencies: Clients don't have to depend on methods they don't use.
GitHub (/ ˈ ɡ ɪ t h ʌ b /) is a proprietary developer platform that allows developers to create, store, manage, and share their code. It uses Git to provide distributed version control and GitHub itself provides access control, bug tracking, software feature requests, task management, continuous integration, and wikis for every project. [8]
Hugo is a static site generator written in Go.Steve Francia [4] originally created Hugo as an open source project in 2013. Since v0.14 in 2015, [5] Hugo has continued development under the lead of Bjørn Erik Pedersen with other contributors.
A web framework (WF) or web application framework (WAF) is a software framework that is designed to support the development of web applications including web services, web resources, and web APIs.
Yeoman is an open source client-side scaffolding tool for web applications.Yeoman runs as a command-line interface written for Node.js and combines several functions into one place, such as generating a starter template, managing dependencies, running unit tests, providing a local development server, and optimizing production code for deployment.
TypeScript was released to the public in October 2012, with version 0.8, after two years of internal development at Microsoft. [13] [14] Soon after the initial public release, Miguel de Icaza praised the language itself, but criticized the lack of mature IDE support apart from Microsoft Visual Studio, which was not available on Linux and macOS at the time.