These are the hallmarks of a system which has been designed and tested to deliver great experiences, not only to users, but also to designers and developers. Dojo also packs high-performance implementations of common utilities into its core, and the rebuild of Dojo for 0. The result is a small, tight toolkit that is blazing fast. Community: Dojo is an open community.
As a result many individuals and companies have been able to come together on a level playing field to build tools that benefit everyone. The licensing of the toolkit is designed to be as apolitical as possible and we work hard to ensure that getting your itches scratched is easy if you are willing to get involved.
All development happens in the open and the barriers to entry are intentionally very low. Designer or developer or doc writer, the community Dojo values contributions of every kind and position in the community is commensurate with the quality of the work you do, not political wrangling.
If you want to build a great product and think you can help us, we want to hear from you. Dojo vs. MochiKit: MochiKit is a high-quality JavaScript toolkit which makes writing JavaScript as pythonic as is reasonably possible while still achieving good performance. It follows many of the same conservative principles about packaging, naming, and global namespace usage as Dojo. Authored primarily by Bob Ippolito, it has great docs and tests but unlike Dojo does not ship with a widget system or extensive component set.
Mochi is not backed by a foundation and code lineage is not verified but it is very liberally licensed. They feature good documentation and broad community support as well as tight integration with Ruby On Rails among other frameworks. Scriptaculous provides some controls auto-complete, sliders, etc. They do not feature a package or build system aside from their own distributables. Prototype and Scriptaculous are not backed by a foundation and code lineage is not verified but they are very liberally licensed.
Designed for speed and targeted at a population of professional PHP developers, YUI is designed with the needs of Yahoo-scale applications in mind. Aug 10, Jun 20, Convert tests to intern.
Jan 7, Resolve conflicts with html. Sep 30, Improve handling of progback results. Sep 26, DeferredList as deprecated in the API doc, but don't call dojo. Jul 18, Oct 1, Don't do an extraneous mixin on the data returned from a single arg c…. Apr 10, Jan 4, Jul 5, Fix unintended globals and unused variables, thanks Simon, fixes …. Jul 1, Doc typo. May 21, Jul 21, Use domReady as a function rather than as a plugin, so dependencies….
Aug 21, Mar 5, Make dojo core module summaries show up in the doc. Doc only commit. Simplify kwargs definitions and workaround doc parse…. Jul 20, Mar 8, Oct 6, Sep 28, Dec 31, Feb 11, Remove dojo. Dec 22, Aug 30, Updates to handle when a call to obj.
Allow first function registered with dom-prop::set to be disconected. Feb 18, Feb 24, Sep 19, Apr 1, Jun 24, Arc GIS for Developers. Hide Table of Contents. What's New in Version 3. Tutorials Build your first application. Use an ArcGIS. Mobile-specific application. Directions widget. Search widget. Labeling features client-side.
Write a class. Create a re-usable widget. Share maps with secure layers. Get the API. Required CSS. Supported Browsers. Dojo Work with Dojo. Get Dojo. Dojo and AMD. Dojo Layouts. Additional resources. Why Dojo? Default API strings. Retrieve data from a web server.
Map navigation. Set Extents. Time aware data. Adding a task. Using QueryTask.
0コメント