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Google hopes to upset JavaScript's dominance by introducing a new language, Dart. Dart is designed to be simpler, more familiar, and faster than JavaScript, and Google one day wants to see it ...
Dart, as you may know, is an open source language introduced by Google in 2011 with the goal of eventually replacing JavaScript.
Google’s plan to replace JavaScript — one of a couple of such plans, actually — has hit a major milestone: the release of Dart 1.0. Originally announced and previewed back in October 2011 ...
Large JavaScript Web apps can be hard to develop and slow to run. Google's Dart language may offer a solution to address both of those issues.
Google is creating the new Dart programming language to "leapfrog" JavaScript and deliver a better-designed alternative that the company wants to eventually see integrated into Web browsers.
Dart has managed to make minor inroads with programmers, if only as an intermediate language for writing fast and efficient JavaScript code. In October, Dart cracked the top 20 of the Tiobe Index ...
Once upon a time, Google's Dart programming language seemed ready to take on JavaScript as the default language of the web. Google was even going to give ...
Dart is not coming to Chrome, Google announced today. The lingua franca of the web is JavaScript, but with Dart, Google launched a project that effectively aimed to replace JavaScript. In Google's ...
Google releases the JavaScript alternative, saying it's ready for use on the real-world Web, even if the company hasn't won over browser rivals.
Google: Dart will rescue browsers from JavaScript The programming language for Web sites and Web apps is less complex and therefore easier to develop, Chrome programmers argue at Google I/O.
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