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The goal is to build tools and applications that have both web-based and standalone versions for multiple OS's (*nix, Mac, Win, etc.).

I've got a general idea of how to architect software that is flexible enough to accomplish this, but ...

Is there a language or framework that's designed for or uniquely suited to this task?

EDIT:

Thanks all for your answers, but I wasn't specific enough in my question.

To make things a bit more complicated (and more useful for my purposes),

  • The OS-specific distributions need to have minimal dependencies, and
  • the standalone versions are truly "offline".

"This application requires X library to run" is unacceptable, because non-technical people need to be able to download and run without much trouble. Java is out, unless a full JVM with libraries can be packaged-in and distributed for a few extra megabytes for most platforms (is that possible?).

I do not know how robust Python's py2exe and py2app are, but I was headed in that general direction.

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Best tool for the job: cross-platform, open source, on- and off-line tool development.

The goal is to build tools and applications that have both web-based and standalone versions for multiple OS's (*nix, Mac, Win, etc.).

I've got a general idea of how to architect software that is flexible enough to accomplish this, but ...

Is there a language or framework that's designed for or uniquely suited to this task?