Best Development Frameworks for Gitpod

Find and compare the best Development Frameworks for Gitpod in 2024

Use the comparison tool below to compare the top Development Frameworks for Gitpod on the market. You can filter results by user reviews, pricing, features, platform, region, support options, integrations, and more.

  • 1
    Vue.js Reviews
    Built on top of standard HTML, CSS, and JavaScript with intuitive APIs and world-class documentation. Reactive, compiler-optimized rendering system that rarely needs manual optimization. An ecosystem rich in features that can be easily adopted incrementally. It can scale between a library or a fully-featured framework. Vue is a JavaScript framework that allows you to build user interfaces. It is built on top of JavaScript, CSS, and standard HTML and offers a declarative and component-based programming structure that allows you to efficiently create user interfaces, no matter how simple or complex. Vue extends the standard HTML with a template syntax, which allows us to describe HTML output using JavaScript state. Vue tracks JavaScript state changes automatically and updates the DOM as soon as they occur. Vue is a framework that provides most of the features required for frontend development.
  • 2
    Svelte Reviews
    Svelte is a revolutionary new way to build user interfaces. Traditional frameworks like Vue and React do most of their work in browsers. Svelte moves that work to a compile step when you build your app. Svelte uses techniques such as virtual DOM diffing to update the DOM whenever your app's state changes. Svelte was recently voted as the most popular web framework by the most satisfied developers in two industry surveys. We are sure you will love it. For more information, read the blog post introducing Svelte. Svelte is a tool to build fast web applications. It is similar to JavaScript frameworks like Vue and React, which share the goal of making it easy for users to create intuitive user interfaces. Svelte converts your application into JavaScript at build time. It does not interpret your application code at runtime.
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