Polymer lets you build encapsulated, reusable Web Components that work just like standard HTML elements, to use in building web applications. Using a Web Component built with Polymer is as simple as importing its definition then using it like any other HTML element.
There’s one question that comes up again and again on stackoverflow. The question is about ngDoCheck lifecycle hook that is triggered for a component that implements OnPush change detection strategy…
I work on a library called Polymer, which helps you write web components faster and easier. This is awesome, but it’s only awesome if you (yes, YOU) know what a web component is, and know that you want to write one. So here’s a story about what these things are and teaches you how to use them without showing you 10 pages of docs and getting you to install tools and CLIs. Maybe it’s for you. Maybe it isn’t. In either case, it has otters.
Curious about Docker but you haven't tried it yet? Andrew Glover gets you going with quick instructions to create a Dockerfile that runs Amazon’s DynamoDB Local. Set it up once and your Dockerfile runs DynamoDB or any other service with just one click.
PrimeFaces is an open source component suite for Java Server Faces featuring 90+ rich set of JSF components. Additional TouchFaces module features a UI kit for developing mobile web applications.
* 90+ rich set of components (HtmlEditor, Dialog, AutoComplete, Charts and many more).
* Built-in Ajax with Lightweight Partial Page Rendering.
* Native Ajax Push/Comet support.
* Mobile UI kit to create mobile web applications for handheld devices with webkit based browsers.(IPhone, Palm, Android Phones, Nokia S60 and more)
* Compatible and Lightweight.
* Skinning Framework with 25+ pre-designed themes.
* Extensive documentation.
F. Akmel, E. Birhanu, B. Siraj, and S. Shifa. International Journal in Foundations of Computer Science & Technology (IJFCST), 7 (5/6):
01-12(November 2017)