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+<img alt="Ajax" title="Ajax" src="http://blog.wired.com/photos/uncategorized/ajax.jpg" border="0" style="float: right; margin: 0px 0px 5px 5px;" />For our last Ajax tutorial I thought I'd list some of the more popular Ajax frameworks on the market.
+
+
+* [Dojo][1]: Dojo is an Open Source DHTML toolkit written in JavaScript.
+
+* [Prototype][2] is a JavaScript Framework that aims to ease development of dynamic web applications.
+
+* [Script.aculo.us][3]: Provides you with easy-to-use, compatible and, ultimately, totally cool JavaScript libraries to make your web sites and web applications fly, Web 2.0 style.
+
+* [Mochikit][4]: MochiKit is a free lightweight JavaScript library.
+
+* [Yahoo User Interface Library][5]: The Yahoo! User Interface (YUI) Library is a set of utilities and controls, written in JavaScript.
+
+
+I should point out that Script.aculo.us is not a framework exactly, rather it includes Prototype and adds some additional hooks on top of it.
+
+If you're looking for frameworks for specific languages, ajaxpatterns.org [maintains a nice list][6].
+
+[5]: http://developer.yahoo.com/yui/ "Yahoo User Interface Library"
+[4]: http://mochikit.com/ "Mochikit"
+[3]: http://script.aculo.us/ "Script.aculo.us"
+[1]: http://dojotoolkit.org/ "Dojo Ajax Toolkit"
+[2]: http://www.prototypejs.org/ "Prototype"
+[6]: http://ajaxpatterns.org/wiki/index.php?title=AJAXFrameworks "Ajax Framworks" \ No newline at end of file