shithub: libmujs

ref: 434ae67268c108d372392c0c45dd7b50ea33ba4d
dir: /docs/introduction.html/

View raw version
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<link href="style.css" rel="stylesheet">
<title>MuJS Introduction</title>
</head>

<body>

<header>
<h1>MuJS Introduction</h1>
</header>

<nav>
<a href="introduction.html">Introduction</a>
<a href="reference.html">Reference</a>
<a href="examples.html">Examples</a>
<a href="license.html">License</a>
<a href="http://git.ghostscript.com/?p=mujs.git;a=summary">Source</a>
<a href="https://bugs.ghostscript.com/">Bugs</a>
</nav>

<article>

<h2>Why choose MuJS?</h2>

<h3>Javascript is a proven scripting language</h3>

<p>
Javascript is one of the most popular programming languages in the world.
It is a powerful extension language, used everywhere on the web &mdash; both as
a way to add interactivity to web pages in the browser, and on the server side
with platforms like node.js.

<p>
With MuJS you can bring this power to your application as well!

<h3>MuJS is standards compliant</h3>

<p>
MuJS implements ES5.
There are no non-standard extensions, so you can remain confident that
Javascript code that runs on MuJS will also run on any other standards
compliant Javascript implementation.

<h3>MuJS is portable</h3>

<p>
MuJS is written in portable C and can be built by compiling a single C file using any standard C compiler.
There is no need for configuration or fancy build systems.
MuJS runs on all flavors of Unix and Windows, on mobile devices (such as Android and iOS),
embedded microprocessors (such as the Beagle board and Raspberry Pi), etc.

<h3>MuJS is embeddable</h3>

<p>
MuJS is a simple language engine with a small footprint that you can easily embed into your application.
The API is simple and well documented and allows strong integration with code written in other languages.
You don't need to work with byzantine C++ templating mechanisms, or manually manage garbage collection roots.
It is easy to extend MuJS with libraries written in other languages.
It is also easy to extend programs written in other languages with MuJS.

<h3>MuJS is small</h3>

<p>
Adding MuJS to an application does not bloat it.
The source contains around 15'000 lines of C.
Under 64-bit Linux, the compiled library takes 180kB if optimized for size,
and 260kB if optimized for speed.

Compare this with V8, SpiderMonkey or JavaScriptCore,
which are all several hundred thousand lines of code,
take several megabytes of space,
and require the C++ runtime.

<h3>MuJS is reasonably fast and secure</h3>

<p>
It is a bytecode interpreter with a very fast mechanism to call-out to C.
The default build is sandboxed with very restricted access to resources.
Due to the nature of bytecode, MuJS is not as fast as JIT compiling
implementations but starts up faster and uses fewer resources.
If you implement heavy lifting in C code, controlled by Javascript,
you can get the best of both worlds.

<h3>MuJS is free software</h3>

<p>
MuJS is free open source software distributed under the
<a href="https://opensource.org/licenses/ISC">ISC license</a>.

<h3>MuJS is developed by a stable company</h3>

<p>
<a href="http://artifex.com/">Artifex Software</a> has long experience in
interpreters and page description languages, and has a history with open source
that goes back to 1993 when it was created to facilitate licensing Ghostscript
to OEMs.

</article>

<footer>
<a href="http://artifex.com"><img src="artifex-logo.png" align="right"></a>
Copyright &copy; 2013-2017 Artifex Software Inc.
</footer>

</body>
</html>