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Mar 20, 2017 at 9:34 history edited CommunityBot
replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
Feb 26, 2016 at 22:31 history edited Madara's GhostMod
edited tags
Nov 9, 2015 at 18:30 comment added T.J. Crowder @Braiam: But you can always post a request for the version-specific tags to be removed. Discussion of that off-topic for this request, which is a boring old "they're synonyms, let's make them synonyms" request.
Nov 9, 2015 at 18:25 comment added T.J. Crowder @Braiam: No, that's why we have donut (er, I mean javascript), which should be and is the primary tag used. But when discussing the details of Donut 2015's nifty new chocolate cream, donut-2015 (combined with donut) lets us be more specific. (And then, of course, donut-jumped-the-shark when they add strawberry jam to a chocolate cream donut! ;-) )
Nov 9, 2015 at 18:22 comment added Braiam So, are you saying, that because to a plain donut I add chocolate cream and then later strawberry jam it stops being a donut?
Nov 9, 2015 at 18:13 comment added T.J. Crowder @Braiam: I'll have to respectfully disagree that ES5, ES2015, and (by the looks of it) ES2016 don't fundamentally change the core of JS. :-) ES2015 in particular is a revolution for the language -- or rather, a revolutionary evolution. ES5 gave us control over properties we could only dream of in ES3, and strict mode. Now ES2015 is giving us dramatically powerful new abstractions like arrow functions, generators, iterators, block scope, promises, templates, modules, and constants. It's like the Cambrian explosion. ES2016's async functions are similarly fundamental, if a bit lonely.
Nov 9, 2015 at 17:53 comment added Braiam "Backward compatibility is almost never sacrificed," exactly my point! You are just adding features to something that essentially don't change in its core. Having a tag for each batch of added features is simply not worth the problems it causes (mistagging/irrelevant tagging, tag bombing, difficulty to find the relevant question, tag badges becomes essentially inaccessible for experts on the topic, etc.).
Nov 9, 2015 at 17:51 answer added Bergi timeline score: 4
Nov 9, 2015 at 17:51 comment added T.J. Crowder @Braiam: Not sure I'm following your logic, but TC-39 aren't reinventing JavaScript every year; they're augmenting it. Backward compatibility is almost never sacrificed, and there's only been one big one so far, which was opt-in (strict mode). So right now, for instance, in a ecmascript-2017 tag, we'd be talking about asynchronous functions and the exponentiation operator and the like. Until recently we'd've been talking about Object.observe, but it's gone back to stage 2.
Nov 9, 2015 at 17:44 comment added Braiam The thing is that it reduces visibility sharply. Also, one does not simply reinvent a language yearly! People that know how to answer a 2015 question may know how to answer 2016 and beyond.
Nov 9, 2015 at 17:34 comment added T.J. Crowder @Braiam: Well, we have a tag for that: javascript. :-) The version-specific tags are for version-specific features, before, during, and immediately after.
Nov 9, 2015 at 17:33 history edited T.J. Crowder CC BY-SA 3.0
added 95 characters in body; edited tags
Nov 9, 2015 at 17:33 comment added Braiam @TylerH if that were the case, I would say "just call it ecmascript, and call it a day"
Nov 9, 2015 at 17:32 comment added T.J. Crowder @TylerH: Not historically, but that's the idea now: "The plan is to release a new version of ECMAScript every year, with whatever features are ready at that time." Elsewhere they say they "may" propose new releases to the Ecma general committee in May and September (and!) but I think they expect no more than one per year, and they emphasize the word "may." :-)
Nov 9, 2015 at 17:26 comment added TylerH @thefourtheye Does ECMAScript release a new version every year?
Nov 9, 2015 at 13:25 history edited T.J. Crowder CC BY-SA 3.0
deleted 136 characters in body
Nov 9, 2015 at 13:19 comment added Mad Scientist @Oriol There are no requirements for synonyms, at least not if a moderator creates them. I'd have expected the tag to be called javascript-es6, I know it's not the official name, but most of the time I see it called just Javascript ES6 or only ES6.
Nov 9, 2015 at 0:17 comment added thefourtheye But the official name is "ECMAScript® 2015", not "ECMAScript® 6". Also, it would be better if we take care of "ECMAScript® 2016" now itself.
Nov 8, 2015 at 23:51 comment added Oriol If I remember correctly, suggesting a synonym requires the master to have at least 1/1.25 times as many questions as the slave. So [ecmascript-2015] must be the slave and [ecmascript-6] the master unless a mod does the opposite.
Nov 8, 2015 at 15:50 history edited hichris123 CC BY-SA 3.0
Tag formatting doesn't work in titles. :(
Nov 8, 2015 at 11:11 history asked T.J. Crowder CC BY-SA 3.0