Scalatra

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Scalatra
Scalatra Logo.png
Original author(s)Scalatra contributors
Initial releaseApril 11, 2009 (2009-04-11)
Stable release
2.8.1 / September 25, 2021; 5 months ago (2021-09-25)[1]
Preview release
2.7.0.RC1 / July 1, 2019; 2 years ago (2019-07-01)[1]
RepositoryScalatra Repository
Operating systemCross-platform
Available inScala
TypeWeb application framework
LicenseBSD
Websitescalatra.org

Scalatra is a free and open source web application framework written in Scala.[2] It is a port of the Sinatra framework written in Ruby. Scalatra is an alternative to the Lift, Play!, and frameworks.

Scalatra is an example of a microframework, a web software development framework which attempts to be as minimal as possible.

A full Scalatra application can be written in very few lines of code:

package org.example.app

import org.scalatra._

class MyScalatraFilter extends ScalatraFilter {

  get("/hello/:name") {
    <h1>Hello, {params("name")}</h1>
  }
}

From this tiny domain-specific language, Scalatra can be expanded into a minimal but full-featured model-view-controller web framework. For example, additional libraries can be attached in order to provide templating, object-relational mapping, and unit testing or behaviour driven development support.

Software built with Scalatra[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b https://scalatra.org/2021/09/25/2021-09-25-scalatra-2-8-1released.html. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  2. ^ Synodinos, Dionysios G. (2010-10-07). "Scalatra: A Sinatra-like Web Framework for Scala". InfoQ.
  3. ^ "LinkedIn Signal - No Longer Supported". 2013-08-22.
  4. ^ Synodinos, Dionysios G. (2010-10-11). "LinkedIn Signal: A Case Study for Scala, JRuby and Voldemort". InfoQ.
  5. ^ "Github Scalatra OpenID Consumer code".
  6. ^ "With GOV.UK, British government redefines the online government platform". O'Reilly. 2012-01-31. Retrieved 13 March 2012.

External links[]


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