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Opera Dragonfly completed (with video)

Opera Dragonfly completed (with video)

Opera Dragonfly completed (with video)Opera Dragonfly is a development tool written primarily in HTML, CSS, and JavaScript, but also actively uses other programming languages.

 

 

David Storey, the project’s lead developer, mentions with noticeable pride on the official blog that Dragonfly is one of the most complex web applications ever built. The program is capable of virtually anything the competition does, all with an elegant look and, more importantly, fast. From scanning the DOM tree to running and debugging JavaScript code, analyzing network processes, editing CSS files, and scanning resources, every web developer gets a wealth of software.

Developers have spent a lot of time creating the most appropriate structure for their goals and creating a future-proof, stable foundation on which to build later - and of course after the current 1.0. The end result is a proxy-based architecture, where the Scope module embedded in the rendering engine connects to the debugging application itself through the protocol of the same name. Dragonfly, by the way, is a surprisingly open project, as it is based on completely open source, just as the Scope protocol was made public as its "final" form took shape.


The first preview was Opera 9.50.9972, which already included Dragonfly.

All you need to try it is an Opera browser installed, even as a portable version. Here, either on a web page item, click the Scan Item item from the context menu, or you can use Ctrl + Shift + I to run the program. The Dragonfly is a hybrid application that is automatically updated via the web when launched.

 

 

 

 

 

Source: Hungarian opera

 

About the Author

s3nki

Owner of the HOC.hu website. He is the author of hundreds of articles and thousands of news. In addition to various online interfaces, he has written for Chip Magazine and also for the PC Guru. For a time, he ran his own PC shop, working for years as a store manager, service manager, system administrator in addition to journalism.