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  2. Angular (web framework) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angular_(web_framework)

    Angular 2.0 was announced at the ng-Europe conference 22–23 October 2014. [16] On April 30, 2015, the Angular developers announced that Angular 2 moved from Alpha to Developer Preview. [17] Angular 2 moved to Beta in December 2015, [18] and the first release candidate was published in May 2016. [19] The final version was released on 14 ...

  3. NativeScript - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NativeScript

    NativeScript then uses the abstractions described in the XML files to call native UI elements of each platform. Application logic developed in Angular and TypeScript can be developed independent of the target platform as well. A NativeScript mobile application is built using the node.js runtime and tooling. [18]

  4. AngularJS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AngularJS

    Angular 4 released in March 2017, with the framework's version aligned with the version number of the router it used. Angular 5 was released on November 1, 2017. [ 24 ] Key improvements in Angular 5 include support for progressive Web apps, a build optimizer and improvements related to Material Design. [ 25 ]

  5. Virtual DOM - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_DOM

    The release of AngularJS in 2010 provided a major paradigm shift in the interaction between JavaScript and HTML with the idea of dirty checking. [7] Instead of imperatively declaring and destroying event listeners and modifying individual DOM nodes, changes in variables were tracked and sections of the DOM were invalidated and rerendered when a ...

  6. Node.js - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nodejs

    Node.js relies on nghttp2 for HTTP support. As of version 20, Node.js uses the ada library which provides up-to-date WHATWG URL compliance. As of version 19.5, Node.js uses the simdutf library for fast Unicode validation and transcoding. As of version 21.3, Node.js uses the simdjson library for fast JSON parsing.

  7. FlatBuffers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FlatBuffers

    Some notable users of FlatBuffers: Cocos2d-x, the popular free-software 2-D game programming library, uses FlatBuffers to serialize all of its game data. [7]Facebook Android Client uses FlatBuffers for disk storage and communication with Facebook servers.

  8. V8 (JavaScript engine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V8_(JavaScript_engine)

    In version 41 of Chrome in 2015, project TurboFan was added to provide more performance improvements with previously challenging workloads such as asm.js. [11] Much of V8's development is strongly inspired by the Java HotSpot Virtual Machine developed by Sun Microsystems , with the newer execution pipelines being very similar to those of HotSpot's.

  9. Webpack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Webpack

    Node.js is required to use Webpack. Webpack provides code on demand using the moniker code splitting. Two similar techniques are supported by Webpack when it comes to dynamic code splitting. The first and recommended approach is to use the import() syntax that conforms to the ECMAScript proposal for dynamic imports.