Mojolicious
Original author(s) | Sebastian Riedel |
---|---|
Initial release | September 24, 2008[1] |
Stable release | |
Web application framework | |
License | PAL |
Website | mojolicious |
Mojolicious is a
The Perl Foundation.[5]
As it is written in Perl, Mojolicious can run on any of the many operating systems for which Perl is available, and can be installed directly from CPAN.[6] Prebuilt packages of Mojolicious are also available for NetBSD from pkgsrc[7] and for Microsoft Windows and other operating systems from ActiveState's Perl package manager.[8]
Features
- Real-time web framework supporting a simplified single file mode through Mojolicious::Lite.[9]
- Out-of-the-box support for support.
- Portable and object oriented Perl APIwith no requirements besides Perl 5.10.1 (although 5.18+ is recommended, and optional CPAN modules will be used to provide advanced functionality if they are installed).
- Full stack support.
- Built-in
- Automatic PSGIdetection.
- CSS3 selector support.[13]
References
- ^ "Mojolicious change log".
- ^ "Mojolicious-9.30". Retrieved 2022-12-07 – via MetaCPAN.
- ^ "Mojolicious 2.0: Modern Perl For the Web". Slashdot. 17 Oct 2011.
- ^ Tara Gibbs (17 February 2011). "Mojolicious - An Interview with Sebastian Riedel". ActiveState.
- The Perl Foundation.
- ^ "Mojolicious". CPAN.
- ^ "The NetBSD Packages Collection: www/p5-Mojolicious". pkgsrc.
- ^ "Mojolicious". Perl package manager.
- ^ "Mojolicious - Perl real-time web framework". Mojolicious.
- ^ "Updating the Duct Tape for HTML5: Websockets in Perl (Mojolicious)". DZone. 1 Nov 2011. Archived from the original on 8 October 2017.
- ISBN 978-0-470-95222-1.
- ^ Jamie Popkin (July 2011). "Watch your processes remotely with Mojolicious and a smartphone". Vol. 2011, no. 207. Linux Journal.
- ^ Marcus Ramberg (4 Dec 2010). "Mojolicious". Yet Another Perl Conference.
External links