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Server-Side JavaScript with Rhino, Jetty and MySQL written by peter on July 11th, 2007 @ 11:10 PM Today I continued developing a chicken scratch version of a server-side web framework in JavaScript. Yesterday I joined the Jetty Server to the Rhino JavaScript engine to create a simple HTTP response. That was the front end. Today the back end and the last of the three main pieces joins in the fun: t
Bluish Coder Programming Languages, Martials Arts and Computers. The Weblog of Chris Double. An update to the code demonstrating E4X support is here. Ajaxian is reporting that Sun is releasing Phobos, a Javascript application server. This is a web server that runs Javascript for implementing the server side code. The source has not yet been released, according to Ajaxian, but will be. A while back
A note from the editors: This historically important article, while now outdated, predicted the age of web fonts. CSS is ten years old this year. Such an anniversary is an opportunity to revisit the past and chart the future. CSS has fundamentally changed web design by separating style from structure. It has provided designers with a set of properties that can be tweaked to make marked-up pages lo
URL encoding aka URL escaping aka percent encoding is a mechanism for converting URL characters into a format that can be transmitted by HTTP. Reserved characters are replaced by a hexadecimal value preceded with a ‘%’ which is an escape character. If a URL contains a space, for example, it must be encoded for transmission. Your browser takes a space and reformats it as %20. Siege, on the other ha
Doing development on Chromebook usually means developing online. There are a lot of sites around for that. But with the APIs getting more mature, its just a matter of time before someone builds a kick-ass IDE which runs natively on Chromebooks without network connectivity. One such tool which I’ve been exploring for a last few weeks is from Google and called “Chrome Dev Editor” If you have never b
When I was writing the summary of differences between WebOb and other request objects, to remind myself of web frameworks I might have forgotten I went to the WebFrameworks page on the Python wiki. Looking through that page I’m reminded how many framework options there have been. And I was further reminded of how few relevant options there are now. From all this, there have emerged just a few opti
NAME HTML::WikiConverter - Convert HTML to wiki markup SYNOPSIS use HTML::WikiConverter; my $wc = new HTML::WikiConverter( dialect => 'MediaWiki' ); print $wc->html2wiki( html => '<b>text</b>' ), "\n\n"; # A more complete example my $html = qq( <p><i>Italic</i>, <b>bold</b>, <span style="font-weight:bold">also bold</span>, etc.</p> ); my @dialects = HTML::WikiConverter->available_dialects; foreach
Shriram Krishnamurthi, Fiona Hopkins, Jay McCarthy, Paul T. Graunke, Greg Pettyjohn, Matthias FelleisenHigher-Order and Symbolic Computation, 2007Abstract The PLT Scheme Web Server uses continuations to enable a natural, console-like program development style. We describe the implementation of the server and its use in the development of an application for managing conference paper reviews. In the
In his article, ”Desktop Applications are Dead”, Eugueny Kontsevoy – a Windows developer – argues sarcastically about the demise of Desktop applications. His article has real merit though and focuses almost exclusively on the problems which are introduced by Vista’s aggressive security policies. The annoying aspect of Windows Vista’s “cancel or allow” is undeniable, especially if seen through the
You think I am speaking old news here? After all, everybody and his sister have been screaming on the street lately about the death of desktop programming. The majority, if not all, of those screamers have always been "web app" developers. Who listens to those? They aren't even real developers, right? They don't know any better. They don't even know how to use malloc() and free() properly! Poor so
Over the past year or so I have spent a whole lot of time evaluating different web frameworks, trying to find what works best for me. Like many programmers, I am a bit of a perfectionist, but I am also a pragmatist. I want my tools to work absolutely right every time, and I want my tools to help me effectively get certain tasks done. However, if you've programmed much at all, you know that perfect
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