8 Matching Annotations
- Last 7 days
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muse.jhu.edu muse.jhu.edu
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In their2014 article for Contemporary Education Psychology, C. M. Bohn-Gettler andP. Kendeou further note how “These verbalizations can provide a measureof the actual cognitive processes readers engage in during comprehen-sion” (208)
Have to look this up, but this might be dependent on culture and historical moment -- how important is the verbalization of writing (and often scripture). Thinking here of Plato's time when reading aloud was seen as the easier one to understand in contrast to repetition from memory. Or the Romans and early Christianity where silent reading was not as common.
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- Feb 2021
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github.com github.com
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Lambda defaults are evaluated in the context of the interaction, so you can use the values of other inputs in them.
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github.com github.com
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The assert method is used by all the other assertions. It pushes the second parameter to the list of errors if the first parameter evaluates to false or nil.
Seems like these helper functions could be just as easily used in ActiveRecord models. Therefore, they should be in a separate gem, or at least module, that can be used in both these objects and ActiveRecord objects.
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github.com github.com
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I like this idea a lot. I have had problems too with having multi-parameters assignments depending so heavily on active record.
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- Oct 2020
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www.onwebsecurity.com www.onwebsecurity.com
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Encoding is dependent on the type of output - which means that for example a string, which will be used in a JavaScript variable, should be treated (encoded) differently than a string which will be used in plain HTML.
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- Dec 2019
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babeljs.io babeljs.io
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TC39 urges caution when using Stage 2-or below proposals, as it might result in inadvertent pressure from the community to keep the implementation as-is instead of improving it for fear of breaking existing code or ecosystem fragmentation (e.g. using a different symbol like # instead of @ for decorators).
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It's completely understandable that this happens without realizing it, but continuing to do so sets different expectations for how the language progresses. It's nothing to feel guilty about — we learn as a community and remind one another of how JavaScript works.
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Therefore, it's easy to search around for tweets/blog posts/talks that say "ES7 Decorators" and find that it's become the accustomed name for it.
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