files
graaljs
files | graaljs | |
---|---|---|
1 | 17 | |
26 | 1,623 | |
- | 1.0% | |
5.6 | 9.9 | |
8 days ago | 2 days ago | |
JavaScript | C++ | |
MIT License | Universal Permissive License v1.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
files
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JavaScript for Shell Scripting
I was hoping for an article on how to use Node.js for normal scripting, since it's already pretty close to what it's shown in this library. I've written two libraries to help with scripting in Node.js:
`files`: https://github.com/franciscop/files/
import { read, walk } from 'files';
graaljs
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An ES5-compliant JavaScript interpreter, written in Java
I would guess that depends on the licensing context in which it will be running, since Rhino is MPLv2 <https://github.com/mozilla/rhino/blob/Rhino1_7_14_Release/LI...> and OP's repo is MIT whereas Graal is UPLv1 <https://github.com/oracle/graaljs/blob/graal-23.1.2/LICENSE>. GitHub's license gizmo claims it is OSI/FSF approved, but Oracle gonna Oracle and they for sure have more lawyers than you do
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A list of JavaScript engines, runtimes, interpreters
graaljs
- GraalJS: Node.js compliant JavaScript implementation built on GraalVM by Oracle
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Latest Deno release supports NPM packages
Here: https://github.com/oracle/graaljs
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No one cares about Bun's speed. Your CI does though
It's by Oracle: https://github.com/oracle/graaljs; seems to be built to interop w/ GraalVM based languages/services
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R Shiny App Equivalent
If you need you can run JavaScript from within Java using Graal.js or Nashorn. To evaluate dynamic user input (Strings) you could also use a ScriptEngine (e.g. JavaScript) or dynamically compile inputs to Java using the JShell API.
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CoWasm: An alternative to Emscripten, based on Zig (demo: Python in the browser)
That's just incredibly cool, my congratulations!
Foremost, my apologies if this is a nonsensical question. I haven't been soaking in the WASM ecosystem enough to know how much WASM is "just" JS versus ... something else.
Caveat aside, I saw one of the commits mention jython, which notoriously has ancient (and probably incredibly incomplete) python 2.x support; do you know if python-wasm would run on top of GraalJS (https://github.com/oracle/graaljs#nodejs-support)?
Separately, do you want issues related to zython.org in the cowasm issue tracker? It returns 405 (method not allowed) over and over on POST https://zython.org/python-wasm-sw/read-signal for me
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Dear Oracle, Please Release the JavaScript Trademark
Must be a fork because I found my own commits haha
https://github.com/oracle/graaljs/commits?author=styfle
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Microsoft proposes type syntax for JavaScript
Discussion reference https://github.com/oracle/graaljs/issues/239
What are some alternatives?
deno-exec
TypeScript - TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.
brish - Safely embed Zsh in Python.
deno - A modern runtime for JavaScript and TypeScript.
doom.d - My somewhat modular emacs config.
zx - A tool for writing better scripts
truffleruby - A high performance implementation of the Ruby programming language, built on GraalVM.
shelljs - :shell: Portable Unix shell commands for Node.js
graalpython - A Python 3 implementation built on GraalVM