Kyle Simpson defends JavaScript Coercion's bad reputation

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  • Опубликовано: 3 дек 2024

Комментарии • 12

  • @JSBroadcast
    @JSBroadcast 9 лет назад +9

    Very humble and kind person, really appreciate such people. Cheers to Kyle :0)

  • @smoothbeak
    @smoothbeak 9 лет назад +13

    Very eloquent, and wonderfully spoken.
    I have learned a lot from listening Kyle Simpson, and I appreciate people who try to deeply understand things as I consider myself that kind of person.
    Will be keen to dig into his books.

  • @oreilly
    @oreilly  9 лет назад +2

    Click to watch other keynotes and interviews from Fluent 2015! goo.gl/OD6xbU

  • @odensmore
    @odensmore 9 лет назад +1

    JS is a great language. No .. confusing. Well, the Bad Parts. Hmm..no its a transpiler target (Coffee, Babel, etc). Only Kyle knows and is gracious enough to tell us what JS *really* is. God do I appreciate all he's taught me!

  • @BassByTheBay
    @BassByTheBay 9 лет назад +5

    This is a great clip, however it's poorly titled -- coercion is only the first topic of many discussed here. That said, Simpson *really* gets it. Hope his profile continues to grow because he's an excellent evangelist.

  • @davejoseph5615
    @davejoseph5615 6 лет назад +1

    Yeah, still true that many websites are unusable on slow, mobile connections, and yet they still add more images, more icons, and more layers of garbage, with no way to opt out.

  • @harleymckee
    @harleymckee 9 лет назад +4

    Kyle's the man. Highly recommend his books. Is there a transcript of this?

  • @ahmadalfy
    @ahmadalfy 9 лет назад +1

    This is just brilliant. I live in a country where our internet speed is really slow and we are limited to small bandwidth ... I always wished for a way while developing web application to ask if the user wants the full-fledged experience or the basic *working* one and on the same time not losing his interest.

  • @AlexGW
    @AlexGW 6 лет назад

    Definitely someone who remembers the struggles of the 00s in terms of programming. I like to think that anyone who started programming back then, has never shrugged off the goal of avoiding excessive bandwidth requirements, regardless of todays average net connection speeds. If you love programming, never lose sight of what we should all aim for! Reusable, efficient code