Nutrient SDK
Nutrient provides an extensive solution for all your PDF requirements, delivering tools that seamlessly operate PDF features across any platform.
1. SDK: Incorporate advanced PDF functionality into iOS, Android, Windows, web, or any cross-platform technology, supplying abilities like PDF viewing, annotation, collaboration, and beyond.
2. Libraries: Employ our powerful .NET and Java libraries to enhance your backend applications with batch processing of redactions and PDF forms, OCR'd scanned text, and PDF document editing, all directly from your application server.
3. Processor: Our agile PDF microservice, Processor, enables rapid generation of PDFs from HTML, including HTML forms, as well as Office-to-PDF conversions, OCR, redaction, and XFDF combining and exporting.
4. PDF API: Take advantage of our hosted PDF API to generate, convert, and alter PDF documents in your workflows. We handle the development and server management, freeing you up to concentrate on your business.
At Nutrient, we're not just a tool; we're a committed ally in your success. Gain direct contact with our engineers for expert guidance, utilize comprehensive examples to simplify integration, and make the most of our top-tier documentation.
Learn more
Crowdin
Get quality translations for your app, website, game, supporting documentation, and on. Invite your own translation team or work with professional translation agencies within Crowdin.
Features that ensure quality translations and speed up the process
• Glossary – create a list of terms to get consistent translations
• Translation Memory (TM) – no need to translate identical strings
• Screenshots – tag source strings to get context-relevant translations
• Integrations – set up integration with GitHub, Google Play, API, CLI, Android Studio, and on
• QA checks – make sure that all the translations have the same meaning and functions as the source strings
• In-Context – proofreading within the actual web application
• Machine Translations (MT) – pre-translate via translation engine
• Reports – get insights, plan and manage the project
Crowdin supports more than 30 file formats for mobile, software, documents, subtitles, graphics and assets:
.xml, .strings, .json, .html, .xliff, .csv, .php, .resx, .yaml, .xml, .strings and on.
Learn more
JavaScript
JavaScript serves as both a scripting and programming language used extensively on the web, allowing developers to create interactive and dynamic web features. A staggering 97% of websites globally utilize client-side JavaScript, underscoring its significance in web development. As one of the premier scripting languages available, JavaScript has become essential for building engaging user experiences online. In JavaScript, strings are defined using either single quotation marks '' or double quotation marks "", and it's crucial to remain consistent with whichever style you choose. If you open a string with a single quote, you must close it with a single quote as well. Each quotation style has its advantages and disadvantages; for instance, single quotes can simplify the inclusion of HTML within JavaScript since it eliminates the need to escape double quotes. This becomes particularly relevant when incorporating quotation marks inside a string, prompting you to use opposing quotation styles for clarity and correctness. Ultimately, understanding how to effectively manage strings in JavaScript is vital for any developer looking to enhance their coding skills.
Learn more
JSON
JSON, which stands for JavaScript Object Notation, serves as a compact format for data exchange. Its simplicity makes it accessible for human comprehension and straightforward for machines to interpret and create. Derived from a portion of the JavaScript Programming Language Standard ECMA-262 3rd Edition from December 1999, JSON is a text-based format that remains entirely independent of any specific programming language while employing familiar conventions found in C-family languages such as C, C++, C#, Java, JavaScript, Perl, and Python. This versatility positions JSON as an exceptional choice for data interchange.
The structure of JSON is founded on two primary components:
1. A set of name/value pairs, which can be represented in different programming languages as objects, records, structs, dictionaries, hash tables, keyed lists, or associative arrays.
2. An ordered sequence of values, typically manifested in most languages as arrays, vectors, lists, or sequences.
These fundamental structures are universally recognized, and nearly all contemporary programming languages incorporate them in some capacity, further enhancing the utility and appeal of JSON as a data format.
Learn more