Timeline for De-synonymize the [react-jsx] tag
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
15 events
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Aug 21, 2019 at 23:29 | history | edited | S.S. Anne | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
Remove confusing stuff
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Jun 25, 2019 at 6:46 | comment | added | Bergi | @BhargavRao I think we should avoid [tsx] and instead tag those questions [typescript] + [jsx]. (Or [jsx-syntax] or [react-jsx] or whatever the tag for the language extension will become) | |
Jun 24, 2019 at 22:30 | comment | added | Bhargav Rao Mod | @MarkAmery and Bergi, if you have time, do take a look at the tsx one meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/380384/… as well. That's a smaller one, and can probably done before we get dirty with this. | |
Jun 24, 2019 at 21:23 | history | edited | Bergi | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
added 22 characters in body
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Jun 24, 2019 at 21:21 | answer | added | Mark Amery | timeline score: 7 | |
Jun 24, 2019 at 16:31 | history | edited | Bergi | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
added 2 characters in body
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Jun 24, 2019 at 10:55 | comment | added | Mark Amery | @Bergi Will write up this evening after work if nobody else has done so by then. | |
Jun 24, 2019 at 10:47 | comment | added | Bergi | @MarkAmery Thanks for the investigation. Can you write that as an answer to the renaming proposal? (I guess [jsx-lang] would be a proper alternative) | |
Jun 24, 2019 at 10:42 | comment | added | Mark Amery |
Hmm. Actually, from Googling, it looks like "altJS" (as opposed to Alt.js) was once, many years ago, an obscure term of art for a language that compiles down to JavaScript? Meaning that e.g. TypeScript, CoffeeScript, React JSX, and github.com/jsx/JSX are all examples of altJSes? I guess per that usage, altjs-jsx technically makes sense... but what proportion of people asking questions about any of those tools have ever encountered the term altJS used in that way? Personally, I've never seen it in my entire career, and wrongly assumed here that altjs referred to the Alt.js library.
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Jun 24, 2019 at 10:38 | comment | added | Mark Amery |
@Bergi Oh. I see - following the links in the current jsx tag wiki, I see it was last updated in 2015 and is - as you say - unrelated to React's JSX. It doesn't use XML and the "X" does not stand for XML like in React's JSX. However, importantly, it also seems to have nothing at all to do with Alt.js; the tag Wiki reference to "AltJS" seems to be used in the sense of "JSX is an alternative JavaScript" rather than "JSX is built on top of Alt.js". The official docs never use the word "altjs" anywhere. So renaming to altjs-jsx would be confusing and wrong.
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Jun 24, 2019 at 10:21 | comment | added | Bergi | @MarkAmery They're not different dialects, they're completely unrelated but unfortunately go by the same name. (TBH I don't even have a clear idea what alt-jsx is or whether it has anything to do with JavaScript - the linked question should make that case). This request here is primarily about removing the tag synonym between react-jsx and reactjs. | |
Jun 24, 2019 at 9:12 | comment | added | Mark Amery |
Even speaking as someone who's worked a little with React in the past, the rationale here is hard to understand. Some extra exposition would make this easier for non-experts to follow, if you wanted to. (How many different JSX dialects are there? How do they differ? Is "React JSX" a distinct dialect that differs from some other flavour of JSX? Why does it make sense to assume that people who used the seemingly React-specific react-jsx tag are asking generic JSX questions while people who used the seemingly generic jsx tag are asking specifically about Alt.js?)
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Jun 22, 2019 at 17:41 | history | edited | Bhargav RaoMod | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
edited title
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Jun 22, 2019 at 17:41 | comment | added | Bhargav Rao Mod | related questions on disambiguation of tsx, and burnination of jsx. | |
Jun 22, 2019 at 17:16 | history | asked | Bergi | CC BY-SA 4.0 |