17 projects tagged "JavaScript"
JWt (Java Web Toolkit) is a library for developing accessible and interactive Web applications with an API that is widget-centric and inspired by desktop GUI APIs. To the developer, it offers abstraction of Web-specific implementation details, including graceful degradation. Under the hood, the library uses the latest techniques when available to handle events and update the user interface.
eHour is a Web-based time registration tool for project-based businesses. The primary objective is to keep time tracking as simple as needed while still being very effective at measuring and reporting the amount of time your team spends on a project. eHour is available as a standalone version or a WAR file, which you can deploy in your existing environment. eHour is JVM (Java & Scala) based.
XPTracker is a radical alternative agile planning tool aimed at keeping out of your way and making sure you can see the stuff you care about at a glance. Included in this tool is a very advanced search system based on Lucene, an easy-to-use planning system based on Queues, and a customizable reporting engine (with burndown/scope creep charts) called Timelines.
Vosao CMS is a CMS for Google App Engine. It features hierarchical page content with parent/child relationships, friendly URLs, CKeditor 3.0 integration with uploading and a file browser, custom design templates for pages with per-page template binding, a global site configuration panel, resource management (images, CSS, JavaScript, etc.), site import/export (content and all resources), feedback forms, a text resource file editor with the ability to create files, a CAPTCHA service, support for comments on pages with email notification and moderation, SEO URLs and a redirect table for indexed links, multi-language content support, localized message bundles, and user browser language auto selection.
The tox (Tomcat, Oracle, and XML) Web archive is a foundation for development of HTTP-based applications using Tomcat (or some other servlet container) and an Oracle RDBMS. It requires coding primarily in PL/SQL, JavaScript, and XSLT, but also in HTML, CSS, and potentially Java. It enables the construction of applications using the model/view/controller (MVC) design pattern. With a controller that executes interpreted XML for creating the model and view, developers can construct new functionality. The model is retrieved either via includes or by the execution of Oracle's stored procedures, and then passed to an XML stylesheet transform to construct and return the view. Different combinations and options provide rich dynamic content.
Algorithm Study provides tools and resources to augment the traditional study of algorithms. It includes implementations of common and less-common algorithms in a variety of languages and visualization tools to help in gaining a deeper understanding of the algorithms. The algorithm implementations are each accompanied by a discussion of the asymptotic ("big O") run time and memory limits of the algorithm. Some implementations include discussion of how the algorithm or data structure is commonly used and comparisons with similar algorithms or data structures. All implementations have test cases that exercise their functionality. The visualization tool, Algorithm Visualizer, displays what happens as various algorithms do their work.
Schmant is a build tool for building Java programs. It provides a set of build tasks (compile, text process, tar archive, etc.) and an environment in which to run build scripts. Build scripts can be written Groovy, JavaScript, JRuby, or Jython. The goal of the project is to be feature-comparable with Apache Ant, but much nicer to work with.
[fleXive] is a Java EE 5 content repository aiming to support upcoming industry standards like CMIS. It strives to provide a holistic approach by offering a comprehensive set of tools and building blocks for building content-centric Web applications around a [fleXive] content repository. It speeds up development by easing many tedious and repetitive programming tasks and helping to keep your application(s) flexible during the development cycle and in production. It concentrates on enterprise-scale content modeling, storage, and retrieval, and includes comprehensive JSF support for displaying and manipulating these contents in (Web) applications. Key features include persistence, security, versioning, multi-language support, and scripting.
After The Deadline is contextual spell checking, grammar checking, and style checking technology. It has seamless service integration with online publishing tools and platforms (WordPress, TinyMCE, etc.). AtD's sophisticated language models can catch and suggest corrections to subtle errors in context.