@Luggage btw, I was told you use bookshelf/knex, I have some queries for you, if you don't mind. One thing I'm kind of really confused about is what the preferred way of declaring normal (like string) columns/properties. The few examples I've found seem to be doing that in migration files, but they were mostly half-mocks of a real scenario
do bookshelf models only define query methods and relationships? It seems like a huge mix of really weird stuff
knex is an abstraction layer over the different SQL database drivers. It lets you make queries in a programatic way that is still just SQL in a JS api. bookshelf can make some queries for you to automatically handle the normal operations on an object (insert, update, delete)
yea, you can use that schema to make a migration or create a datbase from scratch. i might have some code to paste.
it does give objects a 'lifecycle' and a place to put business logic. But you can do that your own way. bookshelf is not really that big of a deal. skip it.
I want to hear it. I don't have any really good counterarguments to typescript except that I'm too lazy to do things properly (in the typescript way. Of course I'm careful about most things), so that might help
on the other hand, I might come off as sexist if taken off-context
yea, but TS can be used to simply tell you WHERE you were inconsistent. You can use it as a fancy linter against code you know doesn't follow all the rules.
So it can be added to existing JS projects and you can choose the level and type of involvement.
in my cases, I know I spend way too much time deciding how something should be treated semantically, and with normal JS, most of that doesn't even matter, and all I need to do go get closer to being done is remind myself of that. With typescript, however...
@Luggage and that works most of the time, when done well