📝 HTML to React parser.
-
Updated
May 29, 2024 - TypeScript
DOM (short for Document Object Model) is a cross-platform and language-independent interface that treats an HTML or XML document as a tree structure wherein each node is an object representing a part of the document. The DOM represents a document with a logical tree. Each branch of the tree ends in a node, and each node contains objects. DOM methods allow programmatic access to the tree; with them one can change the structure, style or content of a document. Nodes can have event handlers (also known as event listeners) attached to them. Once an event is triggered, the event handlers get executed.
The principal standardization of the DOM was handled by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), which last developed a recommendation in 2004. WHATWG took over the development of the standard, publishing it as a living document. The W3C now publishes stable snapshots of the WHATWG standard.
In HTML DOM (Document Object Model), every element is a node:
📝 HTML to React parser.
PHP microframework, routes, controllers and views
Test suites for Web platform specs — including WHATWG, W3C, and others
Full Blazor WebAssembly and Javascript Interop with multithreading via WebWorkers
Light-weight, simple and fast XML parser for C++ with XPath support
The fast, flexible, and elegant library for parsing and manipulating HTML and XML.
A JavaScript implementation of a web browser without its graphical user interface
DOM-aware tokenization for Hugging Face language models
Build fast web applications with Rust.
Web Applications with Effect-TS
A declarative, HTML-based language that makes building web apps fun
To help people, here’s a jQuery to JavaScript cheat sheet that includes the JavaScript equivalents to the most frequently used jQuery functionality.
Headless Chromium-based web performance metrics collector and monitoring tool
Comprehensive collection of coursework and study notes from the Complete JavaScript Course, instructed by Jonas Schmedtmann. It contains detailed notes, code snippets, exercises, and additional resources to aid in learning and understanding JavaScript concepts covered in the course.
Created by World Wide Web Consortium
Released October 1, 1998