JavaScript Conquered the Web. Now It’s Taking Over the Desktop | WIRED
▻http://www.wired.com/2016/05/javascript-conquered-web-now-taking-desktop
JavaScript was originally created in 1995 to give web pages a little more pep than the <blink> tag could provide. Today it has far more powerful uses. Companies like Google and Facebook build complex, desktop-like web applications with JavaScript; since the launch of Node.js in 2009, it’s also become one of the most popular languages for building server-side software. Today, even the web isn’t big enough to contain JavaScript’s versatility: it’s now making its way into applications for the desktop.
Electron is a software development platform created by Github that lets developers use JavaScript along with other web technologies like HTML and CSS to create desktop applications that can run on Windows, Macintosh OS X, and Linux. The company released the first full version of Electron yesterday. But some of tech’s biggest names have already put the tool to work to push JavaScript beyond the browser.
Related Stories
The Creator of JavaScript Is Out to Upend the Ad Industry
The Creator of JavaScript Is Out to Upend the Ad Industry
I Turned Off JavaScript for a Whole Week and It Was Glorious
I Turned Off JavaScript for a Whole Week and It Was Glorious
Clever New GitHub Tool Lets Coders Build Software Like Bridges
Clever New GitHub Tool Lets Coders Build Software Like Bridges
Last year, Microsoft released a code editor called Visual Studio Code that was built using Electron. Workplace chat unicorn Slack uses Electron to build its desktop client. The startup Nylas (formerly known as Inbox) used Electron to build an entire email client.
Electron Quick Start
▻http://electron.atom.io/docs/tutorial/quick-start
#javascript #programmer #deskop