Promises are in 2015 spec, but libraries can support them in es5... if someone reads promises examples but hasn't read about arrows.. i guess it could be helpful...
By the way, after thinking about it, I think you're right @MarcoScabbiolo. We don't need another level of hierarchy. Just different sections would work just fine.
@cswl Dude, right? I've rejected so many edits to that. In my opinion, that section should be as simple as possible.
You can do this yourself - click the "move example" icon on the topic:
This will then let you select the example(s) you wish to move:
...and pick a target topic:
The final step creates two drafts, one on each topic, that actually implement the movement.
I've taken care of moving the ASP...
That guy keeps retracting his edits. I've been trying to tell him to remove the semicolon from the end of an if block but he retracts it before I get to finish my comment.
I agree. While it'd be nice for this particular use case, I also don't think it'd be a good "one size fits all" solution. What would be the, if you will, environment level in the hierarchy be for things like R? The new tags is a better solution.
@cswl I'm conflicted on that one. I don't think that's a very comprehensive look at the topic, nor a terribly good example of minification, but it's not terrible.
@MarcoScabbiolo Maybe that's a better solution. Have a topic on post-processing and have minification as an example rather than having an entire topic dedicated to minification.
If we want to avoid library ads, I personally think it's best to avoid a JavaScript specific topic on unit testing. I think that maybe a "Testing" section makes sense and have unit testing as a topic of that section. Unit testing is a very general software topic
The problem is post-processing, testing, linting, are all crucial parts of good JS development. They all require to include at least one library to give a working example. It's a hard one.
The major problem I have with documentation is that people treat it too much like a book. E.g. the entire post about the == and === is great, but it is not an example. It is an essay of some kind at this point, and still people want to extend it more.
@2426021684 Yes, especially if the topic is marked as such, or the example is marked as >= ES6. I think we should focus on creating very recent examples, as creating examples using old syntax will only become older with time.
@Sumurai8 I wrote the == and === post initially, and yes, it is not exactly an example. But if you would need to teach a developer JavaScript, you would have to tell him/her at some point that its better to use === and why right? There is a very fine line between what is an example, and what is to properly document the language
I tried my best on that post to focus on examples that illustrate what i was trying to document, but prose is needed too :/
I think it's because we aren't sure of exactly what documentation should be like yet... they say examples.. but you can't have examples without explanation...
@MarcoScabbiolo Yes, it is important that a developer knows about those, but I think part of it can just be linked in a Q&A on SO. We can even just say "strict equality should always be used, unless there is a good reason not to do so", then show that a == b, b == c, but c != a in some cases and just link to a Q&A on SO for future reading. The last version I saw, "the solution" was buried under almost a page of text.
I might suggest an edit on it somewhere in the future
@2426021684 I think examples should use ES5 syntax or use the version tags to document what version they are compatible with. So you can use arrow functions, but just mark the examples as ES6.
@cswl Yeah, I'm thinking we should stop adding topics around the DOM at least, as that has its own tag now: stackoverflow.com/documentation/dom
@2426021684 If the topic handles something modern I would say () => { ... }. If the topic handles window.setTimeout() you probably want to use function() { }. If you are just looking at a proposed change, I would not wheelwar about it.
@cswl That could get ugly real quick. I think if someone's unclear on it, they should be able to look up what each of those steps does (i.e., look up split(), reverse(), join()).
To address the missing tag for Web APIs / Web technologies we need to find a proper SO Q&A tag with more than 500 questions and people to commit to it.
@nicael I thought the point of Hello World was to illustrate, simply, how to do something in the language itself. That example is anything but simple, no matter whether it's shorter or not. It might be good as an example for working with canvas, but for JavaScript?
^ That's kind of my thinking. I think it could be broken into two parts: how to initialize a canvas and how to draw text. Separately, I think it would be very useful but not as an intro to the language.
@nicael What do you think? I suppose we're talking about the scope of the "Saying Hello from JavaScript". Mike and I seem to think that it should be as simple as possible and act as an introduction to the language. Do you think it should have a different scope?
I believe that, by getting rid of those transform / size sets / color / fonts / aligning canvas could still be a valid example, a three - four lines is an acceptable size for Hello World. Definitely some other topics will duplicate and expand the technique used in the Hello World example, I think it's inevitable.
@nicael I could see that. I just wonder if it would require more setup than that topic would suggest. I see that topic as an almost "copy-paste to see something" kind of a thing. But that's just my opinion. I'm totally on board for at least reducing it to the essential statements required to display text
@nicael, @MikeC, I guess my question is where do we draw the line? Because you know we'll start seeing how to say Hello World using the Audio API or through Bluetooth speakers connected to RaspberryPI dongle using Node. We're getting away from JavaScript as a language, and more as a way of interacting with external APIs.
Assuming it's reasonable to believe we'll be able to move topics between tags, I would put it under the 2D canvas topic for now so it will be included when the topic is moved.
Am I wrong in thinking that this example isn't helpful? As far as I understand, they both pose the same memory concerns but the suggested way actually has the possibility of going out of scope, leading to a perceived leak.
I'm not talking about an accidental global. What I mean is that if you create a closure then you create essentially an object which can be stored in another object or an array. If you forget about it, your memory might fill up. The first example doesn't have this problem nor does it exhibit any other memory problem
Basically, at best it's backwards and at worst it's just wrong.
@cswl I was kind of worried about that. MDN does a really good job with a lot of these topics. I feel like we're redocumenting things which don't need it.