core-js
ECMAScript 6 compatibility table
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core-js | ECMAScript 6 compatibility table | |
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141 | 33 | |
23,853 | 4,406 | |
- | 0.2% | |
9.8 | 6.0 | |
3 days ago | 5 days ago | |
JavaScript | HTML | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
core-js
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Emacs' helm is maintained by one maintaner for 11 years long
This is surprisingly common. The other example off the top of my head, a single maintainer of a very popular project who had to temporarily abandon it due to lack of funds, is Denis Pushkarev (zloirock) and core.js (https://github.com/zloirock/core-js/blob/master/docs/2023-02...).
The majority of OSS projects have most of their contributions by one person (the project leader), and the vast majority of OSS contributors don't do it for their job. It seems nearly every single popular OSS project is like this (one unpaid, maybe sponsored, volunteer doing most of the work); it's not even worth listing projects and names, because you can just pick a couple projects you know and I bet at least one will be an example. Fortunately, most of these people seem to be well-off (probably in part due to the quality of programming jobs), but every once in a while there's someone who's not so fortunate. It should be more common to sponsor maintainers, especially if they are asking for donations provided they can prove that they really need the money (the world we live in, some people who have plenty fake issues to solicit donations, then others who genuinely need and deserve the money are scolded and left unfunded because of them).
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Users are massively giving their 1-star reviews to AdBlocker
Funny you say that, I was just thinking earlier today back to the core-js drama.
In short: the creator of a NPM package that is used by approximately everyone, everywhere, was facing a legal battle. He had been developing this package full time for years and did not have the cash on hand to hire a lawyer. He added a console log that ran on installing his package that said something like "If you're using core-js please consider donating". Queue an absolute shitstorm of people screaming at him in the github issues and him going to prison for around 10 months. Luckily he seems to be back on the grind nowadays, with a decently robust cross-platform slush fund to boot (~200k USD across Pateron, Open Collective, Bitcoin).
It can be a rough world out there for the folks building for the "focus, productivity and anti-distraction" platform.
https://github.com/zloirock/core-js
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SpeakBits - A reddit alternative without the corporate baggage
I think everyone here knows that, at some point, the site would start costing a lot of money and would need to be funded in some way. I would love for the Wikipedia donation model to work for a site like this but everything I find points to that not being the case. Reddit gold not covering server costs and open source devs not tied to a corporation struggling to continue working on their projects being two prime examples. If anyone has anything that can convince me to give it a try, please let me know and I will switch this to a non-profit.
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Why there may never be a libjpeg-turbo 3.1
Open source developers are not being paid. They published under licenses that allow zero cost and businesses won't pay.
If you want to write open source code for living, you have to find a business model that works. In this case, it is even under permissive license.
* code freeze - code is under open source license only a certain time after commit/release. Maybe add "support", aka you get security fixes in timely manner.
* open core - put some features behind commericial door.
* go ImageSharp way of split license. That one is fun, because MS deprecated/killed (throws exceptions on attempt to use) official image/font library and that was was intended replacement. Rather blatant offloading of costs.
This has been rehashed several time (core-js recently https://github.com/zloirock/core-js/blob/master/docs/2023-02...).
The gist of it is: Companies are not going to pay if they don't have to. That is the reality and it's not going to change.
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[Torte de Lini] After 375 changes, all 166 Standard Hero Guides are updated to patch 7.33d
This is one of the few examples. https://github.com/zloirock/core-js/blob/master/docs/2023-02-14-so-whats-next.md
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I am an enthusiast of Linux. But... here is where it sucks
Open source: It sounds pretty nice. Open to everyone... But it sucks in general. People really don't care to contribute to open-source. (e.g. here). It is a really good resource for development but for people who don't know anything about development, it is not important. There needs to be some financial income / support for good open-source.
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Why you use Nodejs and depends 95% on third party libraries which only last of a year or two and don't use something like asp.net which is maintained by Microsoft?
there is https://github.com/zloirock/core-js but is more or less a 1 guy team and he is grossly under paid and well just read this https://github.com/zloirock/core-js/blob/master/docs/2023-02-14-so-whats-next.md im shocked he still works on it
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Why Phoenix?
Choice is good to a point but at some point it becomes crippling. It still haunts me on Rails. Is it yarn, is it brunch, is it npm, is it webpacker, is it esbuild, is it import maps... plus personally the pad-left debacle left a bad taste in my mouth and this little nugget about core-js was heartbreaking. For me it's hard to pick JS for anything other than what I absolutely must.
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Journalists having bad ideas about software development
There's a real story behind that (but the software is core-js, not nginx)
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Discussion Thread
npm WARN deprecated [email protected]: core-js@<3 is no longer maintained and not recommended for usage due to the number of issues. Please, upgrade your dependencies to the actual version of core-js@3. \> [email protected] postinstall /home/daniel/src/test/node_modules/core-js > node -e "try{require('./postinstall')}catch(e){}" Thank you for using core-js ( https://github.com/zloirock/core-js ) for polyfilling JavaScript standard library! The project needs your help! Please consider supporting of core-js on Open Collective or Patreon: > https://opencollective.com/core-js > https://www.patreon.com/zloirock Also, the author of core-js ( https://github.com/zloirock ) is looking for a good job -)
ECMAScript 6 compatibility table
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TypeScript Is Surprisingly OK for Compilers
http://kangax.github.io/compat-table/es6/
This page lists features from es6 (and newer versions linked at the top) along with compliance to the spec. First column is the current browser, second is babel+corejs polyfills.
Overall, babel gets about 70% of the way there.
- Яндекс Браузер не переводит видео про обучение украинских танкистов, хотя другие видео с канала МО Британии переводит нормально
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Brett Slatkin: Why am I building a new functional programming language?
Case in point: Tail Call Optimization has been part of the JS spec since ES6, but remains completely unimplemented in all mainstream browsers/engines besides Safari[1]. For all but the most predictable inputs, you're pretty much forced to use loops where recursion would otherwise be preferable.
Additional case in point: async Iterables cannot be processed as a piped stream. You must use the for await construct, which is a shame considering the FP niceties that the Array type already provides for more traditional lists. Once again, you are forced to use an imperative construct unless you specifically want to defeat the purpose of using an Iterable in the first place by trying to convert it into an Array (... and potentially choking in the process, I might add!).
[1]: https://kangax.github.io/compat-table/es6/
- [AskJS] Is there a detailed comparison chart that shows what's supported in JavaScript ES5 versus ES6?
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A single developer has been maintaining core.js with little recognition or support. Almost all modern single page apps use core.js. Millions of downloads and hardly any compensation
Eventually the browsers started racing to near-full ES6 compatibility. I remember following ES6 progress in realtime with articles and with compatibility tables http://kangax.github.io/compat-table/es6/ . But many people are acting like that either didn't happen, or like it was a one and done thing (despite the ESNext naming shift to avoid the focus on numbers). So we see people just hand-waving away the importance of polyfills like in this gem:
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Tell HN: Firefox Is an awesome browser right now
> https://kangax.github.io/compat-table/es6/
Oh man this was a rough one both for FF and Chrome but Chrome did perform better slightly on cursory glance.
Thanks for providing these links, they're definitely a good rule of thumb benchmarks to test new browsers
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My 1st website "Claw Man" written in javascript
Javascript / CSS language syntax: can see availability for Javascript here - https://kangax.github.io/compat-table/es6/
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Is there any legitimate reasons for the javascript hate?
I say this as a JS user, but there is no singular JavaScript (realistically, it's not even JavaScript but instead ECMAScript). There is no one place to go that lays out all of what the language can or can't do the way PHP and Python do. The ECMAScript board makes recommendations, then the browsers and runtimes implement features of the recommendations. This site does a good job laying out which features are implemented for browsers and runtimes based on the flavor of the ECMAScript standard. This unique experience can be especially frustrating for someone learning JavaScript and coming from another language that does not have this problem.
- JS Polyfills - Part 1
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[AskJS] Is there a JavaScript library that will test all ES features on your browser and tell you which it supports and which it doesn't?
https://kangax.github.io/compat-table/es6/ has a column for "current browser"
What are some alternatives?
create-react-app - Set up a modern web app by running one command.
es6-features - ECMAScript 6: Feature Overview & Comparison
proxy-polyfill - Proxy object polyfill
Babel (Formerly 6to5) - 🐠 Babel is a compiler for writing next generation JavaScript.
Angular - Deliver web apps with confidence 🚀
Traceur compiler - Traceur is a JavaScript.next-to-JavaScript-of-today compiler
node-sass - :rainbow: Node.js bindings to libsass
es6-cheatsheet - ES2015 [ES6] cheatsheet containing tips, tricks, best practices and code snippets
es6-promise - A polyfill for ES6-style Promises
es6features - Overview of ECMAScript 6 features
fromentries - Object.fromEntries() ponyfill (in 6 lines)
Lebab - Turn your ES5 code into readable ES6. Lebab does the opposite of what Babel does.