• @Drusenija@lemmy.world
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      822 months ago

      What’s even wilder is if you look at the code of that package, all it does is include the is-odd package and then return !is-odd. And the is-odd package isn’t much better, it does some basic checks on the input and then returns n % 2 === 1.

      • @NotAViciousCyborg@lemmy.world
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        272 months ago

        I thought I was missing something. JS is one of my main languages and I always just write the is-odd function myself since it’s like 10 characters. It boggles the mind that is-even has 176k weekly downloads

        • @kevincox@lemmy.ml
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          192 months ago

          To be fair having a name can make things easier to read. I get that i % 2 == 0 is a common pattern and most programmers will quickly recognize what is happening. But isEven(i) is just that much easier to grok and leaves that brainpower to work on something else.

          But I would never import a package for it. I would just create a local helper for something this trivial.

          • @NotAViciousCyborg@lemmy.world
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            102 months ago

            Exactly what I would do if I had to reuse it, especially now since I know that adding a package would actually add 2. It all just seems so…inefficient

            • @kevincox@lemmy.ml
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              112 months ago

              Even if the code isn’t reused adding names to sub-expressions can be very valuable. Often times I introduce new functions or variables even if they are only used once so that I can give them a descriptive name which helps the reader more quickly understand what is happening.

              • @NotAViciousCyborg@lemmy.world
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                32 months ago

                Yeah, I do that with pretty much every separate operation in c# since our solutions are pretty big. Most of my JS scripts are just done in ServiceNow which are separated and named appropriately.

        • @gaael@lemmy.world
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          72 months ago

          Also there are 40-something packages depending on it, so I guess it gets pulled automatically when they are used.

    • kamen
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      102 months ago

      This must be a “hold my beer” kind of joke and someone wanting to see how far they can take it.