WebGL
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WebGL
Summary
WebGL is an application programming interface[1]. WebGL ranks in the top 3% of application_programming_interface entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,015 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- WebGL's instance of is recorded as application programming interface[3].
- WebGL's instance of is recorded as client-side web API[4].
- WebGL's instance of is recorded as software[5].
- WebGL's instance of is recorded as programming language[6].
- WebGL's based on is recorded as OpenGL ES[7].
- WebGL's developer is recorded as Khronos Group[8].
- WebGL's software version identifier is recorded as 1.0.2[9].
- WebGL's software version identifier is recorded as 1.0.3[10].
- WebGL's software version identifier is recorded as 2.0[11].
- WebGL is used for 3D computer graphics[12].
- WebGL's Commons category is recorded as WebGL[13].
- March 3, 2011 marks the founding of WebGL[14].
- WebGL's official website is recorded as https://www.khronos.org/webgl/[15].
- WebGL's topic's main category is recorded as Category:WebGL[16].
- WebGL's described at URL is recorded as https://marketplace.sshopencloud.eu/tool-or-service/vCCqBR[17].
- WebGL's Stack Exchange tag is recorded as https://stackoverflow.com/tags/webgl[18].
- WebGL's name in kana is recorded as ウェブジーエル[19].
- WebGL's user manual URL is recorded as https://www.khronos.org/webgl/wiki/Main_Page[20].
- WebGL's official demo URL is recorded as https://get.webgl.org/[21].
- WebGL's official wiki URL is recorded as https://www.khronos.org/webgl/wiki/Main_Page[22].
Why It Matters
WebGL ranks in the top 3% of application_programming_interface entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,015 views/month).[2] WebGL has Wikipedia articles in 22 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23] WebGL is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[24]