Eyad Syria-lover Posted December 21, 2016 Share Posted December 21, 2016 (edited) I Think It Would Be An Excellent Decision If You Add A Tutorial About The Sixth Version Of JavaScript To W3schools... Edited December 21, 2016 by Eyad Syria-lover Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ingolme Posted December 21, 2016 Share Posted December 21, 2016 It's not supported by Internet Explorer and barely supported by Safari, it doesn't work on the Android browser. It would be confusing for people who are learning Javascript for the first time when the examples aren't working. Here's a table showing browser support for ECMAScript 6: https://kangax.github.io/compat-table/es6/ If you are already an expert in Javascript and you want to learn ECMAScript 6, you don't need a beginner's tutorial site to teach it to you, go to more detailed sources. Here's a list of features you can learn about: http://es6-features.org/ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Eyad Syria-lover Posted December 22, 2016 Author Share Posted December 22, 2016 Maybe You Can Add This Tutorial And Teach People How To Setup Babel In Order To Compile Down From ES6 To ES5?,Because W3schools Always Does A Great Tutorials,Better Than Any Another Web Development Tutorials Site... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thescientist Posted December 23, 2016 Share Posted December 23, 2016 I don't think that it would be a bad thing personally, as a lot of popular frameworks like Angular 2 and React are using ES6 and TypeScript in their tutorials and so are a lot of the blogs and guides. That said, there will still be the requirement of needing a transpiler for the time being but, I certainly think there are lots of tutorials and guides around that too, however, at the risk of linking people off site to other tutorials (for Babel, TypeScript, Webpack, Gulp, etc) I could see W3Schools being hesitant in that regard as well. Either way, I firmly encourage any intermediate JS developer to start learning ES6 features now and consider taking the extra time to learn how to transpile that source code down to ES5 compatible JS. New features, like imports have fundamentally helped changes the language (for the better IMO) and I think the resulting source code is better for it too. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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