The GitHub Octoverse annual report for 2021 on app developer trends.
211124 Download the report here. Like1
211124 Download the report here. Like1
Here is a somehow detailed description of a well know issue related to the fact that the tsc compiler (transpiler) does not resolve/emit correctly the path aliases to the output JavaScript .js files. As a result, when you try to run the output file via node you get an error.
The solution presented here uses a tiny external specialized package and more specifically as a demo it uses the @ef-carbon/tspm.
Even in the case you are a newcomer, sooner or later, you will start boring the routine of repeating, again and again, the same actions.
Here there is a quite simple approach using just a pure bash shell script. No external tools or npm packages. Just a quick, clean and fast solution, especially handy for your very fundamental installations.
This the 2nd part of a 2-part post about Angular Directives. Here we focus on Structure -or Structural- Directives and also, we continue with the project of the 1st part, and we provide a step-by-step example with code, for a Custom Structural Directive.
The concept of the ‘Directive’ comes from the early versions of Angular (e.g., AngularJS 1.X) The concept covers almost all the basic building blocks of Angular, including Components. Angular provides ‘ready-made’ Directives that we can use them directly in our templates. However, here we will focus on Custom Directives, with examples to both, Attribute and Structural Directives. In this post we give a step-by-step example with code, for a Custom Attribute Directive.
An Angular directive selector can have various syntax formats, following the syntax of a typical HTML element. This fact, gives us enough flexibility to apply a custom directive to any part of an HTML element. In this post we will show some fundamental syntaxes, as well as some of their variations.
Like many other languages, Typescript offers a built in Array sort() method. However, most of the times we have to use and pass our own comparison function. This is the case, especially when we have to order arrays of objects, and ordering should be based on specific object property. Moreover, we have also to take into account the default mutability of arrays, if we have to preserve the initial arrangement of the elements in an array.
Typescript is a programming language developed and maintained by Microsoft. It is a strict syntactical superset of JavaScript and adds optional static typing to the language. TypeScript is designed for the development of large applications and transcompiles to JavaScript.