enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. React (software) - Wikipedia

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

    React DOM – Fix passive effects (useEffect) not being fired in a multi-root app. React Is – Fix lazy and memo types considered elements instead of components 16.13.0 26 February 2020 Features added in React Concurrent mode. Fix regressions in React core library and React Dom. 16.14.0 14 October 2020 Add support for the new JSX transform. 17.0.0

  3. Meteor (web framework) - Wikipedia

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

    Meteor, or MeteorJS, is a partly proprietary, mostly free and open-source isomorphic JavaScript web framework [3] written using Node.js. Meteor allows for rapid prototyping and produces cross-platform (Android, iOS, Web) code. The server-side MongoDB program is the only proprietary component of Meteor and is part of the Meteor download bundle ...

  4. 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]

  5. Node.js - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nodejs.org

    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.

  6. 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.

  7. TurboGears - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TurboGears

    TurboGears is a Python web application framework consisting of several WSGI components such as WebOb, SQLAlchemy, Kajiki template language and Repoze.. TurboGears is designed around the model–view–controller (MVC) architecture, much like Struts or Ruby on Rails, designed to make rapid web application development in Python easier and more maintainable.

  8. CommonJS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CommonJS

    CommonJS's specification of how modules should work is widely used today for server-side JavaScript with Node.js. [1] It is also used for browser-side JavaScript, but that code must be packaged with a transpiler since browsers don't support CommonJS. [1]

  9. CoffeeScript - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CoffeeScript

    The CoffeeScript compiler has been self-hosting since version 0.5 and is available as a Node.js utility; however, the core compiler does not rely on Node.js and can be run in any JavaScript environment. [17] One alternative to the Node.js utility is the Coffee Maven Plugin, a plugin for the Apache Maven build system.