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The State of JavaScript Frameworks, 2017 Laurie Voss, co-founder and COO, npm, Inc. January 3rd, 2018 Part 3: Back-End Frameworks The story on the back end is simple: Express is the overwhelmingly dominant solution for back end services written in JavaScript. The next four biggest frameworks are so small relative to Express that it’s hard to even see them. The other clear pattern here is that Expr
Deleted articles cannot be recovered. Draft of this article would be also deleted. Are you sure you want to delete this article? Sure, I am happy to help! もちろん、喜んで協力します! Do you think Haskell is underrated as an industrial, professional programming language by IT project managers? Yes, definitely. There are a few aspects of Haskell which makes it look like a bad choice: はい、全く持ってその通りです。いくつかの点でHaskel
V8 implements a large subset of the JavaScript language’s built-in objects and functions in JavaScript itself. For example, you can see our promises implementation is written in JavaScript. Such built-ins are called self-hosted. These implementations are included in our startup snapshot so that new contexts can be quickly created without needing to setup and initialize the self-hosted built-ins at
Using the History API to manage your URLs is awesome and, as it happens, a crucial feature of good web apps. One of its downsides, however, is that scroll positions are stored and then, more importantly, restored whenever you traverse the history. This often means unsightly jumps as the scroll position changes automatically, and especially so if your app does transitions, or changes the contents o
For more than a decade the Web has used XMLHttpRequest (XHR) to achieve asynchronous requests in JavaScript. While very useful, XHR is not a very nice API. It suffers from lack of separation of concerns. The input, output and state are all managed by interacting with one object, and state is tracked using events. Also, the event-based model doesn’t play well with JavaScript’s recent focus on Promi
A headless Internet Explorer browser using the .NET WebBrowser Class with a Javascript API running on the V8 engine. The API is coded as a port of PhantomJS. Perfect for test automation. If you have used phantom before then you already know how to use TrifleJS. It supports different version of IE interchangeably depending on the current version installed (IE9 can emulate IE7, IE8 or IE9 but not IE
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