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Google Web Designer is a drag-and-drop page builder for Windows, Mac and Linux from Google for creating interactive HTML5 ads and other HTML5 content. [3] It offers a GUI with common design tools, such as a Text tool that integrates with Google Web Fonts, a Shapes tool, a Pen tool, and 3D tools. [4]
In 2012, Silex has reached the 100.000 downloads. [13] And the team has made a dedicated version for HTML, the html5 editor, [14] which was downloaded 1000 times on the first month. In 2013, the team, led by Alex Hoyau [15] started from scratch and build Silex V2 with Javascript, Node.js and more modern technologies than the previous version.
Mobirise is a freeware web design application that allows users to design and publish bootstrap websites without coding. [3] Mobirise is essentially a drag and drop website builder, [4] featuring various website themes. It is headquartered in Eindhoven, Netherlands.
UI Design: the prototyping tool allows designers to create interfaces with a drag and drop system. Justinmind has several UI Kits pre-installed with the option of importing brand new ones. Justinmind has several UI Kits pre-installed with the option of importing brand new ones.
Appery.io is a cloud-based HTML5, Ionic, jQuery Mobile, and hybrid app-building platform for developing mobile apps, web apps, and PWAs. Appery.io is a browser-based drag-and-drop visual builder tool that supports Android and iOS with integrated Apache Cordova/PhoneGap output. [1] [2] [3] The platform is used by DIYers to create apps for their ...
ContentTools is an open-source WYSIWYG editor for HTML content written in JavaScript/CoffeeScript by Anthony Blackshaw of Getme Limited. [1] The ContentTools editor allows text content, images, embedded videos, tables and other page content to be edited, resized, or moved via drag and drop directly within the page.
OpenSilver is an open-source framework designed to facilitate the development of rich internet applications (RIAs) using C# and XAML.It was developed as a successor to Microsoft Silverlight, enabling developers to migrate existing Silverlight applications to the web without rewriting their codebase.
In July 2010, Hammerkit debuted version 4.0 of their platform. The major enhancement in v4.0 was the move to a fully hosted architecture and the renewal of the user interface to utilise drag and drop design rather than the previous point and click approach. [4] In December 2011, Hammerkit announced a new funding round to internationalize the ...