-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 1
/
README
41 lines (34 loc) · 1.93 KB
/
README
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
YUI 2.x Library Source
* Documentation: http://developer.yahoo.com/yui/
* License: http://developer.yahoo.com/yui/license.html
* Latest Stable Release: http://yuilibrary.com/downloads/
* Discuss: http://yuilibrary.com/forum/
* Contributor Info: http://developer.yahoo.com/yui/community/contribute.html
Welcome to YUI.
The YUI Library is a set of utilities and controls, written in JavaScript,
for building richly interactive web applications using techniques such
as DOM scripting, DHTML and AJAX. YUI is available under a BSD license
and is free for all uses.
The source tree for YUI includes the following directories:
* api: Generated API docs for the entire library in HTML format. These
documents are build using YUI Doc from the contents of the src
directory.
* build: Generated/built YUI files. The built files are generated from
the contents of the src directory. Files are provided in full,
commented form (suitable for debugging) and in minified form
(suitable for deployment and use).
* sandbox: The sandbox directory contains works-in-progress, including
unreleased future components, as well as experimental and/or
demonstration code created by library authors.
* src: This directory contains the source code (JavaScript, CSS, image
assets, ActionScript files) for the library. src also contains (or
will contain) all module-specific documentation, tests and examples.
All modifications to the library and its documentation should take
place in this directory. (You will find in the src directory files
like build.xml that are used in the build process. We have not
yet released the build tool that builds components or the build
tool that builds the library generally; we are working on
documenting those tools for public use and they will appear on
GitHub shortly.
Code found in the development head is always a work in progress and
should be treated as experimental.