Hi Peter! I believe you have already helped my case via email through my company, thank you for that! I just happened to see you here by coincidence and thought it would be a great chance to clear some of the follow-up…
I'm new to HN. Could you please expand on how to contact you please? Is your email 'watcha @ say.com'? And should HN be part of the Subject?
I know right. Principle of least Privilege. Simple.
> Scoping rules are inherited from JS, meaning that you can declare variables inside blocks, but their scope is always the enclosing function That's not still the case with `const` and `let` in Javascript, is it?…
Is there any news on a Pro MacBook Pro (ironically named)
This kind of comparison is meaningless. Compare React to Veu.js, as these are both view renderers, not full MV* frameworks. And compare Angular2 to Ember (with Fastboot), both of which are opinionated MV* frameworks.…
And in India where all the developers live - Apple MBPs are everywhere
Hi Peter! I believe you have already helped my case via email through my company, thank you for that! I just happened to see you here by coincidence and thought it would be a great chance to clear some of the follow-up…
I'm new to HN. Could you please expand on how to contact you please? Is your email 'watcha @ say.com'? And should HN be part of the Subject?
I know right. Principle of least Privilege. Simple.
> Scoping rules are inherited from JS, meaning that you can declare variables inside blocks, but their scope is always the enclosing function That's not still the case with `const` and `let` in Javascript, is it?…
Is there any news on a Pro MacBook Pro (ironically named)
This kind of comparison is meaningless. Compare React to Veu.js, as these are both view renderers, not full MV* frameworks. And compare Angular2 to Ember (with Fastboot), both of which are opinionated MV* frameworks.…
And in India where all the developers live - Apple MBPs are everywhere