Plotr - Javascript Charting Framework
Some time ago I was looking for a charting framework for Prototype and I couldn't find it, just because there's none. So that's where it all started. I came across PlotKit, a well written piece of javascript that enables developers to use Canvas or SVG elements for rendering bar, line and pie charts. The only thing was that PlotKit needed the Mochikit library to work. So I took some parts of PlotKit and wrote some parts myself. The result is a lightweight charting framework (12kb!) named Plotr. It's released under the BSD license.
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QuTags - AJAX for PHP
Very nice AJAX framework for PHP. As the develper stated, "maximize PHP application performance and minimize development time with one framework. QuTags takes the burden of JavaScript away, by not only creating all the client side code, but actually propagating the returned results to the elements you specify using a really easy and extremely fast technique. Code as if you were using AJAX for PHP without JAX. You don't even have to know what AJAX or JavaScript is about. Using this library of functions requires only a very small amount of knowledge about PHP. If you can pass arguments to a function you can utilize QuTags. This framework requires absolutely no knowledge of JavaScript or XML."
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ASP.NET AJAX - AJAX Framwork
Build next-generation Web interfaces with a full suite of ComponentOne AJAX-enabled ASP.NET components that fully interoperate with the Microsoft ASP.NET AJAX 1.0 Framework.
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Rich Ajax Platform (RAP)
The RAP project enables developers to build rich, Ajax-enabled Web applications by using the Eclipse development model, plug-ins with the well known Eclipse workbench extenstion points, JFace, and a widget toolkit with SWT API (using qooxdoo for the client-side presentation). The project has graduated from incubation and released its 1.0 release.
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Ext JS 2.0
Ext is a client-side, JavaScript framework for building web applications. In early 2006, Jack Slocum began working on a set of extension utilities for the Yahoo! User Interface (YUI) library. These extensions were quickly organized into an independent library of code and distributed under the name yui-ext. In the fall of 2006, Jack released version .33 of yui-ext, which turned out to be the final version of the code under that name (and under the open source BSD license). By the end of the year, the library had gained so much in popularity that the name was changed simply to Ext, a reflection of its maturity and independence as a framework.
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Max Kiesler is an award-winning strategic designer and co-founder and principal of Ideacodes.com, a web consultancy in San Francisco focused on next generation websites. About Max...