yes, JS = javascript, TypeScript etc. No, nothing to do with Java of course. Just that JS/TS are the languages that seem to be popular for web app development these days, and Java for the back-end. The connection between front and back-end that people seem to prefer these days is REST APIs, which both Java and JS can do easily enough.

- thomas


On 03/02/2018 07:56, Peter Gummer wrote:
On 1 Feb 2018, at 05:13, Thomas Beale <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

... But the main interest is that we will be able to build new tools such as a Java/JS replacement for the ADL Workbench, and of course things like a high-quality, BMM-driven runtime archetype validating kernel for EHR systems, workflow implementations and many other components.


Hi Thomas, does “JS” stand for JavaScript? If so, I don’t understand how Archie (written in Java, disappointingly) would enable JavaScript implementations. JavaScript has nothing in common with Java (apart from the name).

Peter



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Thomas Beale
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Consultant, ABD Team, Intermountain Healthcare <https://intermountainhealthcare.org/> Management Board, Specifications Program Lead, openEHR Foundation <http://www.openehr.org> Chartered IT Professional Fellow, BCS, British Computer Society <http://www.bcs.org/category/6044> Health IT blog <http://wolandscat.net/> | Culture blog <http://wolandsothercat.net/>
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