Build ultra fast, tiny, and cross-platform desktop apps with TypeScript. Two years ago I paused co(lab) to build the desktop app framework I wished existed. Now that I've shipped a stable v1, this post is me reflecting on this two-year sidequest that had me learning Zig, C, C++, and Objective-C. Why I Built This My intro to programming was Visual Basic 6 in the early 2000s, building desktop apps.
Today we are excited to announce the release of TypeScript 5.9! If you’re not familiar with TypeScript, it’s a language that builds on JavaScript by adding syntax for types. With types, TypeScript makes it possible to check your code to avoid bugs ahead of time. The TypeScript type-checker does all this, and is also the foundation of great tooling in your editor and elsewhere, making coding even e
Today we are excited to announce the availability of TypeScript 5.9 Beta. To get started using the beta, you can get it through npm with the following command: npm install -D typescript@beta Let’s take a look at what’s new in TypeScript 5.9! Minimal and Updated tsc --init Support for import defer Support for --module node20 Summary Descriptions in DOM APIs Expandable Hovers (Preview) Configurable
TL;DR: The first stable version Oxlint has been released! With a 50~100x performance improvement over ESLint, support for over 500 ESLint rules, and usage in major companies like Shopify, Airbnb, and Mercedes-Benz, you should give it a try. Get started now. Oxlint is a Rust-powered linter for JavaScript and TypeScript is designed to be fast and simple to adopt. Since its first announcement back in
The Prisma query engine, written in Rust, has always been a core part of Prisma ORM. It was developed for the future, but is no longer compatible with Prisma ORM’s current direction. Read on to learn more about our rewrite from Rust to TypeScript. TL;DR: The Rust-Free ORM is ready for production-use Prisma ORM's core engine has undergone a major shift from the Rust based query engine to a leaner T
Matt PocockMatt is a well-regarded TypeScript expert known for his ability to demystify complex TypeScript concepts. In TypeScript 5.8, a new flag is dropping. It's called erasableSyntaxOnly. It disables a bunch of features that I don't think should ever have been part of TypeScript. Let's talk about it. #What Does erasableSyntaxOnly Do? erasableSyntaxOnly marks enums, namespaces and class paramet
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