9:08 PM
For example, when you're relying the (horrendously crappy) automatic semicolon insertion, that's a lint error.
When you're yield
ing inside of a function which isn't a generator, that's a lint error.
When a loop can only be broken with an exception, that's a lint error
So I don't see why "If you don't have an error handler on a promise, that's a lint error" isn't possible.
For every object with .then()
you must have at least one .catch()
(or a ,then()
with the second argument defined)
It sounds like a pretty simple thing to check in static anlysis.
Every single piece of code I write does not pass the build step if it doesn't pass linting, that's a big part in why I don't have type errors
JavaScript is a very loose and forgiving language, but it's because of that that you need to be very disciplined as a developer.
And I don't think that's a fantasy, and I sure as hell don't think myself as "lucky" in that sense.
I am disciplined, I hate myself when I test only 95% of my code, I never allow code that didn't pass lint + tests into the master branch
That discipline came from getting burned in the past, and seeking alternatives.
Type safety is a very cool and important feature, but it is not, and never will be a replacement for your discipline and sanity as a developer.
And that, is my opinion :)