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Next.js is an open-source web development framework created by the private company Vercel providing React-based web applications with server-side rendering and static rendering. React documentation mentions Next.js among "Recommended Toolchains" advising it to developers when "building a server-rendered website with Node.js". [ 6 ]
A standard library, modeled after Go's standard library, was created in November 2018 to provide extensive tools and utilities, partially solving Node.js' dependency tree explosion problem. [17] The official Deno 1.0 was released on May 13, 2020. [18] Deno Deploy, inspired by Cloudflare Workers, [19] was released on June 23, 2021. [20]
In a browser, the JavaScript engine runs in concert with the rendering engine via the Document Object Model and Web IDL bindings. [2] However, the use of JavaScript engines is not limited to browsers; for example, the V8 engine is a core component of the Node.js runtime system. [3]
WebKit is used to render HTML and run JavaScript in the Adobe Integrated Runtime application platform. In Adobe Creative Suite CS5, WebKit is used to render some parts of the user interface. As of the first half of 2010, an analyst estimated the cumulative number of mobile handsets shipped with a WebKit-based browser at 350 million. [ 56 ]
It uses asynchronous messaging to communicate between the main application process and one or more render processes (Blink + V8 JavaScript engine). As of July of 2022, it no longer supports PPAPI plugins due to removal of PPAPI, legacy Chrome Apps, and Native Client (NaCl) support from the upstream Chromium project. [ 7 ]
JsRender/JsViews is an open-source JavaScript library for writing single-page web applications using templates and the Model–view–viewmodel design pattern. There are three libraries in two source files: JsRender is the template library; JsViews is the MVVM library which provides two-way data binding for the templates
OPENSTEP for Mach supported Intel x86-based PC's, Sun's SPARC workstations, and NeXT's own 68k-based architectures, while the HP PA-RISC version was dropped. These versions continued to run on the underlying Mach-based OS used in NeXTSTEP. OPENSTEP for Mach became NeXT's primary OS from 1995 on, and was used mainly on the Intel platform.
The name is an abbreviation of Desktop Services Store, [2] reflecting its purpose. It is created and maintained by the Finder application in every folder, and has functions similar to the file desktop.ini in Microsoft Windows. Starting with a period . character, it is hidden in Finder and many Unix utilities.