OpenUI5

OpenUI5 is a JavaScript application framework designed to build cross-platform, responsive, enterprise-ready applications.[1] It is an open-source project maintained by SAP SE available under the Apache 2.0 license and open to contributions.[2] OpenUI5's core is based on JavaScript, jQuery, and LESS. The library's feature set includes model–view–controller patterns, data binding, its own UI-element library, and internationalisation support.[1]

OpenUI5
Developer(s)SAP SE and community
Stable release1.69.1 (August 15, 2019 (2019-08-15)) [±]
RepositoryOpenUI5 Repository
Written inJavaScript
Operating systemCross-platform
TypeJavaScript library
LicenseApache 2.0 License
WebsiteOpenUI5.org

History

The team that started the project in 2009, that eventually lead to OpenUI5 was tasked with creating a new user interface (UI) for SAP applications. Objectives included a framework that was flexible, extensible, modern, and would provide a consistent look and feel across SAP applications. In addition to this, at the time SAP's main UI framework was tightly coupled to its backend technology, becoming a bottleneck to UI improvements.[3]

The library was open sourced in December 2013, after being used in production at SAP for several years.[4] In October 2014, the team started accepting contributions via GitHub.[2]

Commercial status

All OpenUI5 components are completely free, and there are no paid "premium" or "commercial" widgets:

OpenUI5 is best described as a one-stop-shop toolkit. It has everything you need to build web applications, while leaving enough flexibility to extend. And by the way, it's the only one that gives you full functionality for free. While other popular toolkits come as a free trial with paid versions for full functionality, OpenUI5 comes as a complete product by itself – no upsells, no paid premium.[5]

OpenUI5 Frequently Asked Questions

Main features

  • 180 UI controls, grouped in cross-device (running on phones, tablets and desktops) — menu, carousel, panel, toolbar, icon tab bar, layout, responsive grid, splitter, list, table, dialog, message box, message toast, responsive popover, calendar, combo box, date range selection, file uploader, rating indicator, segmented button, slider, tags display, color picker, tree, table, tree table, etc.[6]
  • WYSIWYG theme designer (not open sourced)[7]
  • MVC architecture
  • Different view formats (XML, HTML, JavaScript or JSON)
  • Data binding with OData, JSON or XML models
  • I18n, including right-to-left language support
  • Consistent UX patterns across all frontend features
gollark: The UK government is also working on the incredibly ææææ "online safety bill", which obliges online things to ban "harmful content" (not illegal, "harmful").
gollark: I do know about this.
gollark: It doesn't help that various governments and such also seem to not want anonymous online communications.
gollark: Maybe people will get sufficiently annoyed by this sort of practice to get it to stop at some point, or maybe we're doomed to a dystopia of social acceptability.
gollark: I was explicitly told at school recently not to say things people might disagree with online because people might take it into account on job/etc applications.

References


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