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author | Vincent Munier <vmunier.fr@gmail.com> | 2014-11-24 15:26:34 +0000 |
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committer | Vincent Munier <vmunier.fr@gmail.com> | 2014-11-24 15:26:34 +0000 |
commit | 52567e431e41ce1e185fee92de2fc2dd421d9a54 (patch) | |
tree | 782f96c76edda87197fa2574956b83baa72d5556 /book/src/main/scalatex/book/handson | |
parent | 198ec342cc210a66ce46efc6fd8d81d4d2943d95 (diff) | |
download | hands-on-scala-js-52567e431e41ce1e185fee92de2fc2dd421d9a54.tar.gz hands-on-scala-js-52567e431e41ce1e185fee92de2fc2dd421d9a54.tar.bz2 hands-on-scala-js-52567e431e41ce1e185fee92de2fc2dd421d9a54.zip |
typos
Diffstat (limited to 'book/src/main/scalatex/book/handson')
-rw-r--r-- | book/src/main/scalatex/book/handson/CanvasApp.scalatex | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/book/src/main/scalatex/book/handson/CanvasApp.scalatex b/book/src/main/scalatex/book/handson/CanvasApp.scalatex index e68adb7..230ae67 100644 --- a/book/src/main/scalatex/book/handson/CanvasApp.scalatex +++ b/book/src/main/scalatex/book/handson/CanvasApp.scalatex @@ -160,7 +160,7 @@ @p We've by now written a good chunk of Scala.js code, and perhaps debugged some mysterious errors, and tried some new things. One thing you've probably noticed is the efficiency of the process: you make a change in your editor, the browser reloads itself, and life goes on. There is a compile cycle, but after a few runs the compiler warms up and the compilation cycle drops to less than a second. @p - Apart from the compilation/reload speed, you've probably noticed the benefit of tooling around Scala.js. Unlike Javascript editors, your existin Scala IDEs like @lnk.misc.IntelliJ or @lnk.misc.Eclipse can give very useful help when you're working with Scala.js. Autocomplete, error-highlghting, jump-to-definition, and a myriad other modern conveniences that are missing when working in dynamically-typed languages are present when working in Scala.js. This makes the code much less mysterious: you're no longer trying to guess what methods a value has, or what a method returns: it's all laid out in front of you in plain sight. + Apart from the compilation/reload speed, you've probably noticed the benefit of tooling around Scala.js. Unlike Javascript editors, your existin Scala IDEs like @lnk.misc.IntelliJ or @lnk.misc.Eclipse can give very useful help when you're working with Scala.js. Autocomplete, error-highlighting, jump-to-definition, and a myriad other modern conveniences that are missing when working in dynamically-typed languages are present when working in Scala.js. This makes the code much less mysterious: you're no longer trying to guess what methods a value has, or what a method returns: it's all laid out in front of you in plain sight. @sect{Full Scala} @p |