![]() Node v18.16.0 (LTS) has been released with backported support for compiling JavaScript code into a single executable app. ▶️ An hour-long chat on the State of Node.js with some leading figures. Seven folks at Vue Amsterdam 2023 shared their ▶️ tips on getting started with Vue.js. The comments went in lots of odd directions here. A look at a seemingly JS-specific quirk in regular expressions when empty character classes are used.Īn analysis of languages used in GitHub pull requests shows JavaScript/TypeScript leading the way with Python just slightly behind. Serverless platform AWS Lambda has introduced response streaming on its JS runtime (for now) so you can send response data as it becomes available rather than all at once. ▶️ Angular is back with a vengeance, says Fireship. The finished proposals list for 2023 now includes Array find from last, hashbang support, Symbols as WeakMap keys, and change Array by copy. The ECMAScript® 2023 Language Spec Steps Forward - After prematurely announcing the progression of the ES2023 spec in February, we can now announce: TC39 has approved the ECMAScript 2023 spec, and while it remains a candidate, it’s now a step closer to eventual ECMA General Assembly approval. Supercharge AWS S3 Video Streaming with ImageKit's Video API - Get adaptive bitrate streaming, video optimizations, format conversions, and real-time transformations and watermarking by attaching ImageKit with your AWS S3 bucket. ![]() The code examples are worth a look – htmx makes a lot possible, with rather little tooling or markup needed. v1.9 adds support for view transitions and generalized inline event handling. ![]() Htmx 1.9 Released - htmx ( homepage) is an increasingly popular library outside of the JavaScript space as it lets folks use things like WebSockets, SSE, AJAX, and CSS transitions by marking up HTML rather than writing lots of JavaScript. If you need to go in depth, Section 7.2.14 of the ECMAScript spec will help, but otherwise? Stick to three equals ( =) unless you have a good reason not to. ![]() The JavaScript Equality Table Game - Minesweeper will feel like a walk in the park after this reminder of the horrors of JavaScript’s =. ![]()
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