Useful tool that helped more than once finding the performance bottlenecks in my code.
Useful tool that helped more than once finding the performance bottlenecks in my code.
You either allow a single origin, or allow them all with “*”.
Don’t ask me, all these one-line packages are ridiculous, cause greater issues than whatever they solve, and are (part of) the reason why js and it’s ecosystem are not considered seriously by other developers.
Well javascript is the default language of the web, so no surprise it attracts a lot of newbies.
That might look like good news, but it’s just delaying the problem. Far right has only gained votes for the last 20 years, and it’s only through jolts like the first round of these elections that other candidates unify to not let them pass. Nothing is done to address the underlying problems that make people vote for these fuckers, so it’s only a matter of time before they end up accessing power.
You know what gives artists money? Buying their music instead of renting it through a middleman.
Just for the record, I think you’re conflating git and GitHub. They are not the same thing, even if GH would like you to think so.
Got it, but if you expect people to switch from JS to Rust , you’re going to be disappointed. That’s like asking people who just got their driving license to hop into a fighter jet just because it’s faster. JS is a simple language. Its widespread adoption is not due only to it being ubiquitous, but also because it’s pretty easy to learn. Rust, on the contrary, not so much.
Isn’t DOM manipulation notoriously tedious with WASM? That seems quite a showstopper for most client-side js I’d say.
Exactly, it was pretty useful until ~2015 imho. Then JS got better, and coffeescript did not follow these evolutions.
Didn’t they ban it for the younger gen?
Imho there’s no reason to change or upgrade if your current setup works and you’re satisfied with it. Keep your money, you’ll see what the market has to offer when you need it.
If you blindly follow whatever it tells you, you deserve whatever happens to you and your computer.
Same here. Have been a Mint user for more than 10 years and switched recently with the new laptop. I like it a lot, really stable system.
Yes, that’s not a random fan.