Considering the frontend spectre, ELM and ReasonML are both languages which have typed constraints built in.
As we know, that's not the case for JS which needs Typescript/Flow to help with typing but not in a really enforced way and it leads many devs to don't really try and understand how to handle those types in a way that will be more safe or even meaningful, IMO.
Not really a matter of "real | non-real", need to edit this part asap 😔.
For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse
We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers.
What distinguishes a "real" typed language from a "non-real" typed language?
Considering the frontend spectre, ELM and ReasonML are both languages which have typed constraints built in.
As we know, that's not the case for JS which needs Typescript/Flow to help with typing but not in a really enforced way and it leads many devs to don't really try and understand how to handle those types in a way that will be more safe or even meaningful, IMO.
Not really a matter of "real | non-real", need to edit this part asap 😔.