Timeline for Continuous Console.log() s in home page
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
8 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
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Jun 2, 2021 at 21:53 | answer | added | Adam LearStaffMod | timeline score: 12 | |
Jun 2, 2021 at 21:51 | history | edited | Adam LearStaffMod |
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Jun 2, 2021 at 11:42 | comment | added | Sinatr | Pity I am not a web-dev to laugh at SO team and SO teams.. | |
Jun 1, 2021 at 0:32 | history | migrated | from meta.stackexchange.com (revisions) | ||
May 31, 2021 at 20:13 | comment | added | rene | @Levente I'm not the one that scares them. Nick is capable to do that on his own. I'm pretty sure once he is finished there will be no more console.log statements in production and I'm also sure the team will have had a learning opportunity. I poke at organizations for a living, no-one died (yet) due to my poking. | |
May 31, 2021 at 19:40 | comment | added | Levente | @rene pls. don't be so hard on them! If they get scared by your remark, they will ban console logs entirely in the developer team, causing frustration. I don't mean this with overtones, but literally. Console logs had helped me immensely. I know, learning a debugger could help even more immensely; the real way of working. I also agree that console.log() outputs don't belong in production. But this is not an organization that should be poked with scary remarks; they easily get too scared, and that can cause damage that no-one intended... (Let's save the confrontation for worthwhile causes.) | |
May 31, 2021 at 16:36 | comment | added | rene | Amateurs! ... ;) .. that is what you get when you're allowed to hack some inline JavaScript directly into the html to get your stuff passed Nick Craver without a code review and straight into production .... | |
May 31, 2021 at 16:28 | history | asked | Bijoy Das | CC BY-SA 4.0 |