I think it would be valuable to extract the JS transpiler into a standalone package. This would allow developers to leverage the transpiler's capabilities independently of the full Hologram framework.
Currently, the tight coupling with the framework limits adoption and potential contributions from developers who might be interested in just the transpiler functionality. By making it a separate package, you could:
- Increase adoption by allowing partial integration into existing projects
- Attract more contributors who specialize in transpiler development
- Make it easier to maintain and version independently
- Enable better testing in isolation
I'd love to contribute to the transpiler's development, but the current architecture makes it challenging without a full framework migration. Consider this a feature request that would make the tool more accessible to the wider JavaScript community.
I wonder why there are no lawsuits from the companies that had to pay to unlock the trains and did not get any documentation what was fixed/replaced to get it running (in 10min) especially that it was not a single train that had to be unlocked. It's like having ransomware on the plc.
This again shows the problem of automatic reviews. There should be a person name in every review that was responsible for it, currently it's blamed on our automated system. If the law would require someones name on it then I'm pretty sure the review process would be much better and the explanation would include more than an apology.
Using this logic [username, age first_name, last_name] is only 2 characters away.
This example is easy to catch because tuple and map work completly different-it's not python.
Currently, the tight coupling with the framework limits adoption and potential contributions from developers who might be interested in just the transpiler functionality. By making it a separate package, you could:
I'd love to contribute to the transpiler's development, but the current architecture makes it challenging without a full framework migration. Consider this a feature request that would make the tool more accessible to the wider JavaScript community.