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JavaScript asynchronous, event-based I/O. Influenced by systems like Ruby's Event Machine, Perl's POE or Python's Twisted. Plenty of modules available. Opera: Futhark: Opera Unite JavaScript is the server-side language used to develop services for the Opera Unite feature of the Opera browser. This is a server built into the browser.
JavaScript (client), Java (server) Dojo Toolkit: Yes Push Dojo Toolkit Hibernate JUnit Hibernate Spring Security (formerly Acegi), role-based access control: Dojo Toolkit Dojo Toolkit Regular expression, schema-driven validation Project Language Ajax MVC framework MVC push-pull i18n & L10n? ORM Testing framework(s) DB migration framework(s)
Others can use your code to build their own bots. A user new to bot writing may be able to use your code as an example or a template for their own bots. It encourages good security practices, rather than security through obscurity. If you abandon the project, it allows other users to run your bot tasks without having to write new code.
Fresh focuses on server-side rendering with zero runtime overhead. Enhance.dev prioritizes progressive enhancement patterns using Web Components. While these tools reduce reliance on client-side JavaScript by shifting logic to build-time or server-side execution, they still use JavaScript where necessary for interactivity.
Playground Access PHP Ruby/Rails Python/Django SQL Other DB Fiddle [am]: Free & Paid No No No Yes MySQL, PostgreSQL, SQLite dbfiddle [an]: Free No No No Yes Db2, Firebird, MariaDB, MySQL, Node.js, Oracle, Postgres, SQL Server, SQLite, YugabyteDB
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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 later.)
In 2000, Jason Hunter, author of "Java Servlet Programming" described a number of "problems" with JavaServer Pages. [21] Nevertheless, he wrote that while JSP may not be the "best solution for the Java Platform" it was the "Java solution that is most like the non-Java solution," by which he meant Microsoft's Active Server Pages.