I worked closely with Accenture for a few years. They are not a development company. They outsource the development work and get huge margins on these kinds of projects by paying cheap wages to developing countries.…
They could read your text, provide their service and then discard it. Instead, they store it indefinitely. He states this explicitly right here https://twitter.com/sebmck/status/1104132997110878208
Defects and flaws will be repaired for free though
Which it's not. iOS uses JavaScriptCore https://developer.apple.com/documentation/javascriptcore
NCC is a good tool for this too https://github.com/zeit/ncc
A major part of the success of open source has been the fact that companies have the option to fork/tweak/sell the code. MongoDB has benefited from this as much as anyone. They gained the adoption levels they have now…
More like elm than Dart, but elm also compiles (transpiles?) to javascript and Grain compiles to web assembly
Are you asking how they are implemented? You'll have to read the compiler code for that. But the documentation does tell you... "No runtime type errors, ever. Every bit of Grain you write is thoroughly sifted for type…
Grain is quite different. Grain is more functional (no classes or context, tuples). Dart compiles to Javascript. Grain compiles to web assembly. Dart requires you to define types. Grain provides type safety and zero…
I worked closely with Accenture for a few years. They are not a development company. They outsource the development work and get huge margins on these kinds of projects by paying cheap wages to developing countries.…
They could read your text, provide their service and then discard it. Instead, they store it indefinitely. He states this explicitly right here https://twitter.com/sebmck/status/1104132997110878208
Defects and flaws will be repaired for free though
Which it's not. iOS uses JavaScriptCore https://developer.apple.com/documentation/javascriptcore
NCC is a good tool for this too https://github.com/zeit/ncc
A major part of the success of open source has been the fact that companies have the option to fork/tweak/sell the code. MongoDB has benefited from this as much as anyone. They gained the adoption levels they have now…
More like elm than Dart, but elm also compiles (transpiles?) to javascript and Grain compiles to web assembly
Are you asking how they are implemented? You'll have to read the compiler code for that. But the documentation does tell you... "No runtime type errors, ever. Every bit of Grain you write is thoroughly sifted for type…
Grain is quite different. Grain is more functional (no classes or context, tuples). Dart compiles to Javascript. Grain compiles to web assembly. Dart requires you to define types. Grain provides type safety and zero…