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Because no one is using JSON.parse directly. Do you guys even code?
Because no one is using JSON.parse directly. Do you guys even code?
You should remember that the gun death rate in the US is only three times lower than in Ukraine during an active war. US is a fucking war zone!
Plastic is better for the environment than everything else.
It’s done less and less because recycling plastic bottles is better.
Glass bottles are much much worse for the environment.
You’ve replied to the wrong person.
What’s the point of your schema if the receiving end is JavaScript, for example? You can convert a string to BigNumber, but you’ll get wrong data if you’re sending a number.
Why are you so ignorant?
Well, the issue is that JSON is based on JS types, but other languages can interpret the values in different ways. For example, Rust can interpret a number as a 64 bit int, but JS will always interpret a number as a double. So you cannot rely on numbers to represent data correctly between systems you don’t control or systems written in different languages.
Yaml is cancer.
What that means is that you cannot rely on numbers in JSON. Just use strings.
Well, apart from float numbers and booleans, all other types can only be represented by a string in JSON. Date with timezone? String. BigNumber/Decimal? String. Enum? String. Everything is a string in JSON, so why bother?
I would also like to add some of the higher level features available in most assembly languages.
Modern assembly languages have even more higher level features, like macros support. And some are even hardware agnostic, like intermediate representation assembly language used in LLVM.
Guess what, assembly is also a high level language, lol.
1st level is direct binary code as was done with punch cards. Assembly language is a 2nd level language. C is a level above, thus it’s level 3.
And then Linux update breaks something…
Don’t you use git?
Syncthing is a piece of crap.
MS Office has integration. It’s pretty useful in a corporate environment.
It’s not up to me. Or you.