JavaScript and TypeScript look very similar, but there's one important distinction. The key difference between JavaScript and TypeScript is that JavaScript lacks a type system. In JavaScript, ...
TypeScript’s strong typing enables a variety of features that increase developer efficiency, especially when dealing with enterprise-scale codebases. TypeScript is compiled, rather than interpreted ...
TypeScript 6.0 is the last release built on the JavaScript codebase. A new --stableTypeOrdering flag lets developers match TypeScript 7.0 behavior. TypeScript 7.0, written in Go, is "extremely close ...
TypeScript 6.0 RC represents the final major release built on the current JavaScript-based compiler. The upcoming TypeScript 7.0 will use a Go-based native implementation for enhanced speed and memory ...
Say goodbye to source maps and compilation delays. By treating types as whitespace, modern runtimes are unlocking a “no-build” TypeScript that keeps stack traces accurate and workflows clean.