Jaml updates

Jaml seems to have been getting a lot of interest lately. Here are a few quick updates on what's been going on:

In addition Jaml was recently picked up by Ajaxian, and a couple of people have written up blog posts about Jaml in languages other than English, which is great to see.

Jaml is up on Github and has a number of forks already. If you like the library and have something to add, fork away and send me a pull request!

If you've never seen Jaml before or have forgotten what it does, it turns this:

div(
h1("Some title"),
p("Some exciting paragraph text"),
br(),

ul(
li("First item"),
li("Second item"),
li("Third item")
)
);
div(
h1("Some title"),
p("Some exciting paragraph text"),
br(),

ul(
li("First item"),
li("Second item"),
li("Third item")
)
);

Into this:

<div>
<h1>Some title</h1>
<p>Some exciting paragraph text</p>
<br />
<ul>
<li>First item</li>
<li>Second item</li>
<li>Third item</li>
</ul>
</div>
<div>
<h1>Some title</h1>
<p>Some exciting paragraph text</p>
<br />
<ul>
<li>First item</li>
<li>Second item</li>
<li>Third item</li>
</ul>
</div>

See the original post for more details.

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What to Read Next

For further reading on the evolution of JavaScript libraries and enhancing web development skills, check out Jaml: beautiful HTML generation for JavaScript, which goes into detail on using Jaml for creating reusable HTML templates. Additionally, you might find A New Stack for 2016: Getting Started with React, ES6 and Webpack insightful for setting up a modern development stack with React.