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I see that javascript is becoming more and more practical as a server side language with the advent of node.js and v8. As far as frameworks go, most of what I've seen are minimalistic frameworks. Even express.js, one of the more promising ones, is a little bare.

Are there any full stack server-side frameworks out there for JS yet?

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  • There is plenty of middleware for node.js. Do you need more than that?
    – jwueller
    Nov 15, 2010 at 1:37
  • Common wisdom is that for general-purpose commercial web server work, node.js is promising but not anywhere close to being robust enough yet. However for less critical stuff it's pretty awesome and a great way to explore possibilities.
    – Pointy
    Nov 15, 2010 at 13:29

3 Answers 3

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There's RingoJS, the current form of the (surprisingly old) Helma framework. It's a Rhino-based implementation, so you can get whatever you want from the JVM (sort-of a "good news/bad news" joke I guess).

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  • 3
    ringojs.org and helma.org for the curious who don't want to fire up a search engine.
    – jball
    Nov 15, 2010 at 1:20
  • Holy moly @jball how lazy are we around here?!? :-)
    – Pointy
    Nov 15, 2010 at 2:35
  • laziness is the first great virtue of a programmer, at least according to the inestimable Wall.
    – jball
    Nov 15, 2010 at 7:21
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Check out towerjs and railwayjs.

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There is a very powerful webapp stack called ringojs. It is actually a Rhino prompt that you can use to run javascript modules. It is based on Jetty and features a well designed set of modules and a powerful but simple template engine (including inheritence and macros). You can reuse the galaxy of Java libraries out there throught simple Javascript-Java interop. Coming from J2EE development I threw out a lot of ceremony code and configuration - it is very productive, especially tweaking your running webapp throught the prompt

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