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  2. TLDR Pages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TLDR_Pages

    TLDR Pages (stylized as tldr-pages) is a free and open-source collaborative software documentation project that aims to be a simpler, more approachable complement to traditional man pages.

  3. Laravel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laravel

    Laravel 1 included built-in support for authentication, localisation, models, views, sessions, routing and other mechanisms, but lacked support for controllers that prevented it from being a true MVC framework. [1] Laravel 2 was released in September 2011, bringing various improvements from the author and community.

  4. BookStack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BookStack

    BookStack is a free and open-source wiki software aimed for a simple, self-hosted, and easy-to-use platform. Based on Laravel, a PHP framework, BookStack is released under the MIT License.

  5. Comparison of server-side web frameworks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_server-side...

    Laravel: PHP >= 8.0 [89] Any Yes Push Yes Eloquent: PHPUnit: Yes Yes Yes APC, Database, File, Memcache, Redis: Yes Yes Yes Yes Li3 (Lithium) PHP >= 5.3.6 Any Yes Push Yes Yes Unit tests, builtin test framework or other independent No Yes, Plugins available PHP, Twig Plugin available Memcache, Redis, XCache, APC, File Yes, with CSRF Protection ...

  6. RedBeanPHP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RedBeanPHP

    RedBeanPHP first appeared in 2009 on GitHub. [14] The first publicly available version was 0.3.3. RedBeanPHP has been developed by Gabor de Mooij, a software developer from the Netherlands. Because RedBeanPHP is very accessible and it does not hide the SQL language it is used by Universities to teach database programming. [15]

  7. Composer (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Composer_(software)

    Composer is an application-level dependency manager for the PHP programming language that provides a standard format for managing dependencies of PHP software and required libraries.

  8. CodeIgniter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CodeIgniter

    CodeIgniter's source code is maintained at GitHub, [12] and as of the preview version 3.0rc, is certified open source software licensed with the MIT License.Versions of CodeIgniter prior to 3.0.0 are licensed under a proprietary Apache/BSD-style open source license.

  9. Symfony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symfony

    Symfony aims to speed up the creation and maintenance of web applications and to replace repetitive coding tasks. It's also aimed at building robust applications in an enterprise context, and aims to give developers full control over the configuration: from the directory structure to third-party libraries, almost everything can be customized. [2]