
Tripomatic
Wanderlog
TripIt
Roadtrippers
Tripsy
DESTIGOGO
Nomads.com
Tripadvisor
CoffeeScript
Octoparse
Diggernaut
eScraper
Agenty
Typescript
JavaScript
artoo.js
Tripomatic is a trip planning app that helps users create personalized travel itineraries, discover attractions, and organize their trips seamlessly.
Tripomatic
CoffeeScriptCoffeeScript may be recommended for developers maintaining legacy CoffeeScript projects, or for those who prefer its syntax over JavaScript and are working on small projects. It might also be useful for educational purposes to understand how language features influence each other.
Based on our record, CoffeeScript seems to be a lot more popular than Tripomatic. While we know about 28 links to CoffeeScript, we've tracked only 1 mention of Tripomatic. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
I've been using Sygic Travel from the Czech Republic and really like it. It doesn't use Google Maps, but you just press the location on the map, click add, then it autosorts to give you an optimized itinerary (like yours does) and spits out the itinerary. I think your biggest issue is being cost competitive. I paid $7.99 once for Sygic Premium (I think it's $9.99 now), so $19.99/month is an entire tier higher in... Source: almost 4 years ago
Not literally. And I would hardly say it was a matter of language superiority. I love Ruby myself. But Github was a lot simpler when it was still just a Rails app. But Rails was SSR by default, and most of the frontend was just Embedded Ruby (ERB) template files all over the place. And way back when, it was even relatively common to use Javascript supersets like CoffeeScript[1] and Opal[2]. The latter being Ruby... - Source: Hacker News / about 1 month ago
Surely coffeescript would have been more appropriate? [0]: https://coffeescript.org/. - Source: Hacker News / 6 months ago
My personal take is this would be like JavaScript adopting an optional Coffeescript[1] syntax. It's so different that it seems odd to make it an option vs a new language, etc. [1] https://coffeescript.org/#introduction. - Source: Hacker News / 7 months ago
JS isn't perfect, but it's good enough. And there is ongoing effort to make it even better. Also, many other languages compile to JS (without WASM). Notably: - https://www.typescriptlang.org/ - https://coffeescript.org/ - https://clojurescript.org/ - https://www.transcrypt.org/ I wrote https://multi-launch.leftium.com, which is only 6% JS. The majority is Svelte (65%) + TypeScript (27%). ( - Source: Hacker News / over 2 years ago
As a front-end web developer, do you still use CoffeeScript or jQuery? Unlikely, as TypeScript, ES/TC39 and Babel (and the retirement of Internet Explorer thanks to @codepo8 and his EDGE team) have helped to transform JavaScript into some kind of a modern programming language. - Source: dev.to / over 3 years ago
Wanderlog - Collaborative travel planner with combined itinerary and map
Octoparse - Octoparse provides easy web scraping for anyone. Our advanced web crawler, allows users to turn web pages into structured spreadsheets within clicks.
TripIt - TripIt is a travel app that creates a master itinerary to organize all of your plans for your vacation or work trip in one spot.
Diggernaut - Web scraping is just became easy. Extract any website content and turn it into datasets. No programming skills required.
Roadtrippers - The ultimate road trip planner to help you discover extraordinary places, book hotels, and share itineraries all from the map.
eScraper - eScraper is an eCommerce data scraping tool that collects data from multiple sites and prepares a relevant .csv or excel file with all product info for your stores, whether its, PrestaShop, Magento, WooCommerce, or Shopify store.