Just started using Civet and it's really impressive, works well with TypeScript, understands my tsconfig.json, & has a working language server.
Very cool! For years I've wanted to fork LiveScript and integrate it with the TS checker somehow (and remove `on/off/yes/no`, good call), sort of an F# to TypeScript's C#
This reminds me of a mithril project where my state management library was just a global variable. It was a breath of fresh air: simple code, snappy UI, no convoluted debugging.
they distribute ideology but I strongly doubt they possess it. the "which -ist?" question works to their favor (and has for a long time).
I thought about and wrote down my own case for it - if I did it now I'd stress how so many leading orgs are moving to TypeScript as peer pressure. Don't want to be left behind do you?
Policy frames business cycles, there is nothing "natural" about it.
Posobiec is an independent citizen journalist (who just happens to be a navy intel officer).
Some visualization on the package repo and in the CLIs would be excellent. Often when I run a dependency analyzer on a project I'm disgruntled. I think what that Schlinkert guy is doing is obviously grifting, so I don't…
TypeScript can't help at all, it vanishes before the code runs.
Just started using Civet and it's really impressive, works well with TypeScript, understands my tsconfig.json, & has a working language server.
Very cool! For years I've wanted to fork LiveScript and integrate it with the TS checker somehow (and remove `on/off/yes/no`, good call), sort of an F# to TypeScript's C#
This reminds me of a mithril project where my state management library was just a global variable. It was a breath of fresh air: simple code, snappy UI, no convoluted debugging.
they distribute ideology but I strongly doubt they possess it. the "which -ist?" question works to their favor (and has for a long time).
I thought about and wrote down my own case for it - if I did it now I'd stress how so many leading orgs are moving to TypeScript as peer pressure. Don't want to be left behind do you?
Policy frames business cycles, there is nothing "natural" about it.
Posobiec is an independent citizen journalist (who just happens to be a navy intel officer).
Some visualization on the package repo and in the CLIs would be excellent. Often when I run a dependency analyzer on a project I'm disgruntled. I think what that Schlinkert guy is doing is obviously grifting, so I don't…
TypeScript can't help at all, it vanishes before the code runs.