My response is that on avg TS will help you 20% (if your Airbnb 38%).
So is 20% equals to many cases?
What helps with many cases (80%) is reviewing code and testing.
To say it in other words:
The language you are using is like on avg 20%.
Good design, good practices, good testing, good communication and a lot of other things go into good code :)
OR
maybe I'm just triggered by sentences like "Any javascripters intrigued?" 🤣
Sound like you’re triggered to be honest. I don’t know what percentage is “many” but, it means a lot. And the truth is typescript helps catch a lot of potential bugs.
That is what people think but if we look at data from projects and companies actually other things are way more important then the language they use ;)
I’m definitely not trying to understate the importance of other code quality measures, but this study appears to say typescript would have caught at least 15% bugs on average. That’s huge.
My response is that on avg TS will help you 20% (if your Airbnb 38%).
So is 20% equals to many cases?
What helps with many cases (80%) is reviewing code and testing.
To say it in other words:
The language you are using is like on avg 20%.
Good design, good practices, good testing, good communication and a lot of other things go into good code :)
OR
maybe I'm just triggered by sentences like "Any javascripters intrigued?" 🤣
Sound like you’re triggered to be honest. I don’t know what percentage is “many” but, it means a lot. And the truth is typescript helps catch a lot of potential bugs.
That is what people think but if we look at data from projects and companies actually other things are way more important then the language they use ;)
Here is one study for example but please feel free to look into more!
earlbarr.com/publications/typestud...
I’m definitely not trying to understate the importance of other code quality measures, but this study appears to say typescript would have caught at least 15% bugs on average. That’s huge.
A software production, in general, has a time limit and if you are not working on a hobby project you are hoping for a good ROI.
Having 115% more money in the bank after one month or having 180% more in the bank ;)
I would go with 180% since it has a way bigger ROI :)
Thats just my point :)
Doesn’t this oversimplify things? Saving dev costs doesn’t matter a ton if your app is buggy and unusable.
The bank example was more of a metaphor.
ROI in this means less bugged code in less time :)
We invest less to get more out :)