@Scratte Apologies - I've had a difficult couple of weeks. It sounds like you have a lot to say - since it doesn't seem to fit in the contact form, you can email it to me if you like. My address is in my profile.
@VLAZ yup (although I recently tried to find a use case in my codebases and ... failed, actually), I like import { type A } from the statements the most from it, I have a bunch of projects where it will declutter imports significantly
Frankly, I know little of import assertions - haven't followed the proposal
You can say stuff like "I want to make sure I get JSON" or not which is OK and you can also assert you get a specific structure but...I can't actually see THAT much of a use.
The JSON assertion is probably OK if you have import whatever from 'file.js' just in case somebody decides to change the file to be code.
Or something similar, at least.
But the structural assertions seems a bit "meh". Sounds like just added maintenance - either the module supplies you what you want or you change it and then have to go and change the import + assertion.
Oh, and the webassembly assertion is OK, I guess. Similar to JSON.
If you import something you don't expect, it fails directly.
Not sure how much it helps with understanding...
Also, I'm not really sure when exactly you'd want that. Like, you are testing your code, right? Surely if you import random stuff it just wouldn't work.
but that depends on when exactly the assertion fails
let's say Alice wants to import a JSON module, and assert that it is JSON. Bob then tries to steal some info by substituting it with a malicious script that will get executed when imported
the question is... where does the failure happen? I hope as early as possible
then it more or less makes sense - if the assertion throws as soon as it detects that the module is not what it is asserted to be, this is not a bad idea
The proposal mentions something about transformations but somehow I can't find what those tranformations would be. And yeah, I get the point of returning with but different.