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by AdrianRossouw
4471 days ago
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DI is fine, i was just concerned that they have something that breaks as the first recommended way to do something. Much less that they have it at all. Minification pretty much counts as 'normal use' these days, as much as we all have a distaste for it, we really can't change it. You should watch the video on my post and tell me you are still comfortable with it doing that at runtime. And the slippery slope thing? I spent 10 years of my life building open source projects with thousands of contributors and untold thousands of users. That's experience talking there. My point was that you can't deny the sufficiently promising excuse to abuse it further, without admitting that it is flawed to begin with. My suggestion was that now that the ngmin exists, make that the only way to do it and remove all the crazy stuff out of the main execution. I also said that clever hack is the only one that could never get better. There's no standards path for it. They have been shown to deserve the trust. they are removing the hackiness from 2.0. |
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That said, the title of your post makes it sound like you think they're heading off a cliff, but your response to me sounds like the opposite... I was just responding to the tone set by the article.
I'll also agree that it is frustrating early in the AngularJS experience to hit that minification bug. But it's easy to get over also.