2015
Matter.js - a 2D rigid body JavaScript physics engine
Matter.js is a 2D physics engine for the web
2012
Fabric.js Javascript Canvas Library
Fabric.js is a framework that makes it easy to work with HTML5 canvas element.
It is an interactive object model on top of canvas element.
It is also an SVG-to-canvas parser.
2011
Color Thief
by 5 othersA script for grabbing the dominant color or color palette from an image. Uses Javascript and the canvas tag to make it happen.
2010
Doodle.js — A Sprite Library for Canvas | notebook
by 1 otherDoodle.js attempts to create a fun and easy way to interact with the Canvas that is lightweight, flexible, and functional. While it contains a few shape primitives it is not meant to be a full-fledged drawing api, rather a framework that allows you to build sprites and interact with them in an expressive way.
explorercanvas - Project Hosting on Google Code
by 2 othersModern browsers like Firefox, Safari, Chrome and Opera support the HTML5 canvas tag to allow 2D command-based drawing. ExplorerCanvas brings the same functionality to Internet Explorer. To use, web developers only need to include a single script tag in their existing web pages.
2009
Google Chrome Frame - Google Code
by 1 otherEnable open web technologies in Internet Explorer
Google Chrome Frame is an early-stage open source plug-in that seamlessly brings Google Chrome's open web technologies and speedy JavaScript engine to Internet Explorer. With Google Chrome Frame, you can:
* Start using open web technologies - like the HTML5 canvas tag - right away, even technologies that aren't yet supported in Internet Explorer 6, 7, or 8.
* Take advantage of JavaScript performance improvements to make your apps faster and more responsive.
a textile editor - built over html5 canvas
by 3 others I'm pretty sure that textile is the right way to produce content for the web, and that WYSIWYG editors are bad for your website. But editing a large chunk of textile using a textarea is not fun. I usually use Textmate to edit textile content, and wanted to reproduce the same feeling inside a browser.
The best online text editor is currently Bespin and I gave it a try. Unfortunately, the current state of bespin make it pretty difficult to embed the editor itself in a standalone way. Moreover I needed specifics features like 'soft wrap' that is totally required to edit some textile content.
So I took the Bespin way, and started to hack using javascript and HTML5 canvas to create a simple, standalone and totally embeddable textile editor for the web.
About - cufon - GitHub
by 1 otherCufón aims to become a worthy alternative to sIFR, which despite its merits still remains painfully tricky to set up and use. To achieve this ambitious goal the following requirements were set:
1. No plug-ins required – it can only use features natively supported by the client
2. Compatibility – it has to work on every major browser on the market
3. Ease of use – no or near-zero configuration needed for standard use cases
4. Speed – it has to be fast, even for sufficiently large amounts of text
And now, after nearly a year of planning and research we believe that these requirements have been met.
js cloth
3D on 2D canvas demo
1
(14 marks)