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by withinboredom
1608 days ago
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One should also understand the machine code that a traditional language compiles to and how the CPU executes it. Ultimately, your language compiles to machine code. /s No one should need or worry about what an abstraction compiles to unless they’re specifically working on that abstraction or there’s a language bug. |
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> One should also understand the machine code that a traditional language compiles to and how the CPU executes it. Ultimately, your language compiles to machine code. /s
If libraries you use are all written in machine code, then sure, you should have an understanding of machine code. Your comparison clearly doesn't work here.
> No one should need or worry about what an abstraction compiles to unless they’re specifically working on that abstraction or there’s a language bug.
When an abstraction is that leaky, it's barely an abstraction. Typescript does force you to choose a Javascript version as a compilation target. Obviously you are forced to know what Javascript version supports what feature because Typescript isn't going to polyfill every missing feature depending on your Ecmascript target.