I feel compelled to point out that “back door man” was already a common expression in blues lyrics.
I feel compelled to point out that “back door man” was already a common expression in blues lyrics.
I assume that’s what was being referred to.
Oh man Garak is one of the best characters in Trek. And that’s a competitive list.
Holy hell yeah you did. How would you go about doing that in a single expression? A bunch of back references to figure out the country? What if that’s not included? Oy.
I was thinking a nice golden throne. More appropriate for a god-emperor.
I’ll just write thousands of lines of code inside a global object… I’m sure I won’t put a semicolon where a comma should be…
Can I teach you a lesson?
A similar phenomenon is knowing you’re going to need to go back and update some older section of code and when you finally get around to it, it turns out you wrote it that way to begin with. It’s like… I didn’t think I knew about this approach before…
Softly. With their words.
It’s probably also related to when a person first encountered JS. If you learned it pre-2015—even if you’re aware of the changes made in ES6—I can see how it would be hard not to view JS as cumbersome. I personally love to use it, but I can’t imagine that would be true without let
, const
, classes, etc.
Edit also block scoping and arrow functions!
Don’t have this problem on Android. You should probably just switch.