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News about web development
  • Sencha Architect: Visual HTML5, sort of

    By Neil McAllister | 16 May, 2012 20:12

    Sencha describes Sencha Architect 2, the latest incarnation of its visual Web development tool, as "a massive upgrade to Ext Designer," the previous version. The name change from Designer to Architect reflects the product's new focus. Instead of a tool for building Web UIs, Sencha says the new version is suitable for creating complete Web applications, both for UI designers and back-end developers. That's true up to a point.

  • Eclipse readies browser-based IDE

    By Paul Krill | 26 March, 2012 21:12

    The Eclipse Foundation for open source development tools is eyeing July as the release date for the 1.0 version of its Orion browser-based IDE for building Web applications, which will be discussed at this week's EclipseCon 2012 conference in Reston, Va.

  • Cloud computing in 2012: An InfoWorld special report

    By InfoWorld staff | 25 February, 2012 02:05

    InfoWorld gives you the full scoop on the state of the cloud in 2012, including key trends in the cloud's technology and its job opportunities, as well as what you have to know about the cloud before developing for it.

  • Node.js tools: Server-side JavaScript comes of age

    By Peter Wayner | 22 February, 2012 22:16

    The story of Node.js reads like it came from a Hollywood script assembly line: Some kids are monkeying around with scrap they picked up around the Internet and find a new way to snap it together. The next thing you know, they're lapping the pack at the racetrack and coasting to the winner's circle.

  • HTML5: An open standard to rule them all?

    By Faraz Syed, president, Keynote DeviceAnywhere | 22 February, 2012 06:26

    Although vendor-written, this contributed piece does not advocate a position that is particular to the author's employer and has been edited and approved by Network World editors.

  • Programming Opa: Web development, reimagined

    By Rick Grehan | 01 February, 2012 22:07

    Building a Web application today means using a variety of different software technologies, each executing in a different domain. JavaScript, HTML, and CSS in the browser; PHP, Python, Java, Ruby, or the like on the server; MySQL, PostgreSQL, SQL Server, MongoDB, or any of a growing list of database servers as your persistent storage back-end. With Opa, an open source Web development technology from the French company MLstate, building a Web application tomorrow could be much more straightforward -- and safer.

  • Google JavaScript library offers access to APIs

    By Paul Krill | 01 December, 2011 22:20

    Google this week began offering an alpha version of Google APIs Client Library for JavaScript, which provides access to HTTP-based APIs on the Web, as well as to many of Google's public APIs.

  • First look: Google Dart vs. JavaScript

    By Peter Wayner | 23 November, 2011 22:17

    Let's begin with the good news. Google's Dart is a modern, full-featured tool designed by grabbing the best features of Java, JavaScript, and C.

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