Often I need to refer to code written in HTML/JavaScript/CSS, but it is a very awkward construction to constantly refer to the descriptive trio of ‘HTML/JavaScript/CSS’ code.
for example, Mozilla refers to its HTML/JavaScript/CSS JetPack code as ‘a JetPack’.
Other than the defunct ‘dHTML’, what are some concise, generic and accurate terms I can use to collectively refer to applications written in HTML/JavaScript/CSS.
Web application is perhaps too loose of a term, but it’s a start.
Let’s break it down.
(“Application” also suggests that it’s more complex, like with a SQL backend or something, so you might sound even more talented. 🙂
I’m guessing that you had the term LAMP (Linux, Apache, MySQL, and PHP) in mind? To my knowledge there is no such abbreviation for HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. The easiest way to say it is to just say it.
Versus “Front end” – I think that term implies that you built something that customers used. “Web application” is nonspecific about who the users are, so it would apply to customer-facing applications as well as internal-use applications. The word “application” implies that it’s not just a tool; there are users who are not the programmers. “Front end” is probably more impressive because a customer-facing application has to be nicer than an internal one.
If you are not using it in a browser, or it’s not actually on the web, maybe just your intranet or an internally distributed application bundle, it’s still an application developed with web technologies.