Credits
- Getting Started
- Resources
- Key concepts
- Social
- Misc
Mithril.js was originally written by Leo Horie, but it is where it is today thanks to the hard work and great ideas of many people.
Special thanks to:
- Pat Cavit, who exposed most of the public API for Mithril.js 1.0, brought in test coverage and automated the publishing process
- Claudia Meadows, who brought in linting, modernized the test suite and has been a strong voice in design discussions
- Zoli Kahan, who replaced the original Promise implementation with one that actually worked properly
- Alec Embke, who single-handedly wrote the JSON-P implementation
- Barney Carroll, who suggested many great ideas and relentlessly pushed Mithril.js to the limit to uncover design issues prior to Mithril.js 1.0
- Dominic Gannaway, who offered insanely meticulous technical insight into rendering performance
- Boris Letocha, whose search space reduction algorithm is the basis for Mithril.js' virtual DOM engine
- Joel Richard, whose monomorphic virtual DOM structure is the basis for Mithril.js' vnode implementation
- Simon Friis Vindum, whose open source work was an inspiration to many design decisions for Mithril.js 1.0
- Boris Kaul, for his awesome work on the benchmarking tools used to develop Mithril.js
- Leon Sorokin, for writing a DOM instrumentation tool that helped improve performance in Mithril.js 1.0
- Jordan Walke, whose work on React was prior art to the implementation of keys in Mithril.js
- Pierre-Yves Gérardy, who consistently makes high quality contributions
- Gyandeep Singh, who contributed significant IE performance improvements
Other people who also deserve recognition:
- Arthur Clemens - creator of Polythene and the HTML-to-Mithril converter
- Stephan Hoyer - creator of mithril-node-render, mithril-query and mithril-source-hint
- the countless people who have reported and fixed bugs, participated in discussions, and helped promote Mithril.js
License: MIT. © Leo Horie.