![]() ![]() ![]() Seriously? Would it have killed you to use an array of strings? I'm able to understand this because I already know what values/keys/entries do. I dread to think how you'd fare if you were new to JS or even new to ES6. Having to parse sentences full of nonsense words obscures the concepts in an infuriating way, even when I already know what they're talking about. ![]() There's no such thing as semantic naming (the variables used range from the classic foo/bar, a/b/c, x/y/z through to "bam", "zim", and even "AA", "aa" when they're running low on options). The content itself is mostly interesting, but it's clearly not by someone who's familiar with coding education it's presented in such an obstructive way that it shoots itself in the foot.
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