Onux seeks to fix JavaScript’s lack of type safety
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London-based Onux Technologies thinks it has the solution to JavaScript woes. The company announced today that it had released JS++, a type-safe version of JavaScript that it has created over the past few years. Roger Poon, founder of Onux, said, “The challenge with solving a problem of this magnitude is that there is just so much code and so much that has happened since JavaScript was first introduced in 1995. Secondly, it’s very difficult to analyze JavaScript without actually executing code, and the code can execute differently across web browsers and platforms. We’ve worked on this problem since 2011.
Because who doesn't love JavaScript?
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London-based Onux Technologies thinks it has the solution to JavaScript woes. The company announced today that it had released JS++, a type-safe version of JavaScript that it has created over the past few years. Roger Poon, founder of Onux, said, “The challenge with solving a problem of this magnitude is that there is just so much code and so much that has happened since JavaScript was first introduced in 1995. Secondly, it’s very difficult to analyze JavaScript without actually executing code, and the code can execute differently across web browsers and platforms. We’ve worked on this problem since 2011.
Because who doesn't love JavaScript?
JavaScript is as fixable as PHP.
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London-based Onux Technologies thinks it has the solution to JavaScript woes. The company announced today that it had released JS++, a type-safe version of JavaScript that it has created over the past few years. Roger Poon, founder of Onux, said, “The challenge with solving a problem of this magnitude is that there is just so much code and so much that has happened since JavaScript was first introduced in 1995. Secondly, it’s very difficult to analyze JavaScript without actually executing code, and the code can execute differently across web browsers and platforms. We’ve worked on this problem since 2011.
Because who doesn't love JavaScript?
That's a novel idea, they could call it TypeScript. Oh, wait.
"If you don't fail at least 90 percent of the time, you're not aiming high enough." Alan Kay.
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London-based Onux Technologies thinks it has the solution to JavaScript woes. The company announced today that it had released JS++, a type-safe version of JavaScript that it has created over the past few years. Roger Poon, founder of Onux, said, “The challenge with solving a problem of this magnitude is that there is just so much code and so much that has happened since JavaScript was first introduced in 1995. Secondly, it’s very difficult to analyze JavaScript without actually executing code, and the code can execute differently across web browsers and platforms. We’ve worked on this problem since 2011.
Because who doesn't love JavaScript?
Oh great, its got patents pending. Must adopt fast.
"If you don't fail at least 90 percent of the time, you're not aiming high enough." Alan Kay.