It is unfortunate that there isn't a way to fire back the default action of an event after calling Event..preventDefault. Contextual overrides of certain hotkeys is pretty good, otherwise.
The principle of least astonishment (POLA), sometimes also referred to as Principle of Least Surprise, applies to user interface and software design, from the ergonomics standpoint. It is alternatively referred to as the law or rule of least astonishment, or of least surprise. "If a necessary feature has a high astonishment factor, it may be necessary to redesign the feature." In general engineering design contexts, the principle may be taken to mean that a component of a system should behave in a manner consistent with how users of that component are likely to expect it to behave.
== For...
@Cereal No, the variable declaration is inside a script tag in the <head> - I'm trying to console.log inside a doc.ready and I still don't get it - plus it's undefined when I try to get it in the console, too..
@Billy that is weird indeed. Can you go to the debugger's scripts panel, open the "Event Listener Breakpoints" drawer on the right, check "Script First Statement", and reload with devtools open?
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