Fun thing is: for (say) an MMO, if it popular enough you might not even have to use a random number generator at all: just a rotating number that ticks up with each "action" used by a player would be random enough probably.
at some moments, it jumps to 4GB (eg local container deploy)
had to beg the IT dept to get much RAM as possible on my new laptop for that ...
I have other stuffs open (google lens for docker / ssh sessions for monitoring / browsers / two communication apps / some electron apps ) ... no wonder my laptop is often pretty warmed up at the end of the day
hmmm. I'm thinking of embedding es2015 modules short scripts inside a html document. has anyone done that? I can't really think of a major problem but am wondering if I'm missing something. basically something like :
<script type="module">
import {mod_action} from '/js/es2015_mod.js';
document.getElementById('very_id').addEventListener('change', mod_action);
</script>
I find it nice because it has extremely low footprint in large existing codebase
and allows me to be in es2015 module context super easily while changing functionality
it also has a nice side-effect that it makes templating slightly simpler since it removes the need to indicate from the start what JS code needs to be invoked.