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In our most recent Supercharged Livestream we implemented code splitting and route-based chunking. With HTTP/2 and native ES6 modules, these techniques will become essential to enabling efficient loading and caching of script resources. Miscellaneous tips & tricks in this episode asyncFunction().catch() with error.stack: 9:55 Modules and nomodule attribute on <script> tags: 7:30 promisify() in Nod
Making the most of JavaScript’s “future” today with Babel by Marc Harter Jul 30, 2015 / Community, How-To, JavaScript Language From CoffeeScript to ClojureScript to PureScript to CobolScript to DogeScript (woof woof!), JavaScript is the write-once-run-anywhere target for many forms and styles of programming. Yet, its biggest compile-to-language today actually isn’t any of these adaptations; its Ja
Why Babel MattersWhy Babel is different from other compile-to-JS systems like CoffeeScript and TypeScript, and how it's going to become the driving force for innovation in JavaScript. @author Charles Pick @date May 18, 2015 Babel is a transpiler for JavaScript best known for its ability to turn ES6 (the next version of JavaScript) into code that runs in your browser (or on your server) today. For
Babel 5.4 was just released and with it comes support for a new experimental ES7 syntax proposed by Kevin Smith (@zenparsing) and implemented in Babel by Ingvar Stepanyan (@RReverser). Warning: This syntax is highly experimental and you should not use it for anything serious (yet). If you do use this syntax, please provide feedback on GitHub. The function bind syntax introduces a new operator :: w
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