You aren't bothered by all the browser quirks out there and you get a pretty nice version of JavaScript to work with, version 1.7. ![]() ![]() I believe the same can be done in Eclipse using External Tools, if that's what you're more comfortable with. I was running my scripts from command line, but I could have easily set my editor (PSPad) to execute and output the script result inside the editor. ![]() I've been doing some JavaScript work lately using Mozilla Rhino (basically scripting the Apache POI library), which is a JavaScript interpreter written in Java (you can also compile JavaScript scripts to Java classes).
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