Brython: Real Python

Brython stands for ‘Browser Python’ and is Python’s implementation of JavaScript. In a way, Brython is a Python-to-JavaScript compiler. It lets you write client-side code in native Python and compiles it out to HTML, CSS, and JavaScript for you. To work with Brython, you don’t need to know JavaScript.

When developing web applications — we commonly use several technologies, and languages. A back-end can easily be built in Java (Spring Boot), Python (Django or Flask), or JavaScript (Node.js), though the front-end is more commonly done in JavaScript (React, Angular, etc). Sometimes, we even take the hybrid approach of having server-side rendered pages, with final touchups done in front-end frameworks such as React.

Through the years, given its prevalence on the web — the JavaScript community expanded the original functionality to enable JavaScript-powered back-ends, including front-ends. The most common way to code web applications in JavaScript is to use the MEAN stack. A MongoDB database, Node.js with Express.js for the back-end, and Angular (or more recently, React) for the front-end.

But what if you really prefer to develop your apps using Python? While being strictly focused on one programming language isn’t advisable — languages are tools, and being fixated on one tool makes you less flexible — there is still space for single-language applications.

So, do not stick to one try for new and get best.

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MIT College of Railway Engineering and Research

MITCORER, Barshi launched by MIT Group is one of the finest engineering colleges which ventures into the unique field of railway and transportation.