@redline because it's pretty useless. If you really need typing you can always use typehints and get closure compiler warnings for that, you don't really need to enforce it in runtime.
if i'm at work, and i need to quickly extend the Autocomplete class for an autocomplete textbox to add some stupid funcitonality my boss wants, i shouldn't have to run every function to check if an "extend me" is thrown, and i shouldn't have to go find any documentation to tell me, hell what if it was built internally and the documentation was never maintained...having an abstract class tells me what to implement RIGHT WHEN I COMPILE it
@redline If you create a library that just does interfaces (that is, take a class and return a polymorphic view of it as an interface) I'll totally use it
//I really just want something like:
function Impl(){
this.x = 15;
this._y = 10;
}
function Iface(){
this.x;
//MAGIC!
}
var impl = new Impl();
var iface = Iface(impl);
// at this point iface just lets me access _x, attempts to access other variables raises exceptions
@Esailija Which is what I currently do, however interfaces would let me define these contracts in a way that works in teams well. Your 'scaling' problem.
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@Esailija I don't mind undefined, as long as I don't get the property, also, calling the Iface function over the object would raise an exception if it doesn't implement hte contract.
@Esailija Yes, it's another one of the million things proxies would completely solve. Although it would be very slow. I guess we can have production/debug modes where production just relays and debug uses an interface.
no reason for JS not to include optional features that make it more powerful and apply to a larger group of developers, can help significantly from a business perspective, and can provide some really great optimizations at compile-time...simple as that
my father is a carpenter, if i give him shitty tools he does a shitty job, but when i give him laser levels and all kinds of other great shit, he isn't half bad
Put a bad musician on a amazing instrument, and you will still get awful music. Put a good musician on a bad instrument, and you will still get good music.
@BenjaminGruenbaum i have it by building it on top of a dynamic langauge which is built on top of a language that does what i am looking for already, and much much faster
a class is something a compiler recognizes ahead of time and optimizes for...that right there is a dynamic object which has a dynamic class created for it at run-time by V8
@JanDvorak we're already have that conversation, that's silly :P
@redline So a class is defined in a programming language by some specific compiler's ability to optimize for it? Do you see what's hugely wrong with that definition?
i am an engineer, i didn't go to school for CS, i went to school for engineering, and I studied CFD, which is computational fluid dynamics...so i am really big into simulation software...one day i hope to develop a game engine as well (obviously for all the physics and shit)...and i believe that a big part of that engine will be in JS...so if you take my perspective and background into account
i want to develop JS that is really really fast
and really really structured
technically i don't want JS at all...i want C# in the browser...but i still like a lot of other things JS has to offer which hard languages do not
For small N you don't need to optimize. For large N the difference between O(N) and O(N log N) is much more important than some micro optimization or another
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