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From YouTube: Node.js Tooling Group Meeting
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C
C
C
On
that,
I
think
last
we
talked
the
idea
was
to
build
like
a
cli
tool
and
maybe
maybe
that
tool
just
like
wraps
eslint
or
something
like,
rather
than
reinventing
the
wheel
yeah,
which,
interestingly,
I
actually
am
kind
of
tackling
this
exact
same
problem
at
work
right
now,
so
yeah
I'll
kind
of
see
what
comes
out
of
that
kind
of
want
to
do
some
like
custom
linting,
but
not
directly
through
eslint,
for
reasons
so
yeah
it
might
give
me
I
might.
B
C
Yeah
I
I
saw
that
as
well.
Actually
yeah,
okay,
so
I
mean
it
seems
like
it's
something
that's
maybe
wanted.
I
mean
I
would
like
it
so,
okay,
I'll
yeah,
I
mean
I'll.
Let's
keep
it
on
there
see
how
my
my
experiment,
wrapping
eslint
and
like
a
custom,
cli
goes
it
could,
I
guess,
also
be
just
like
its
own
eslint
like
plug-in
or
something
but
yeah.
I
don't
know
we'll
we'll
see
how
this
pans
out.
I
guess
yeah.
A
B
C
B
C
Even
if
it
ends
up
being
some
cli
tool
that
wraps
cs
link,
probably
the
rules
should
be
in
a
plug-in
right.
So
yeah,
maybe
that's
a
good
starting
point.
It's
just
like
write
a
few
custom
rules
because
yeah
again
we
would.
We
would
definitely
use
this
at
my
work
as
well.
So
maybe
that's
a
good
starting
point.
B
Handle
buffers
which
it
doesn't
yet
I
I'd
kind
of
half
implemented
a
buffer
helper
library
for
treating
paths
as
buffers.
The
same
way
that
strings
it
can
treat
strings.
I
realized
I
had
a
couple
bugs.
I
think
I
need
to
change
the
utf-16
parsing
a
little
bit,
so
maybe
I
can
even
simply
maybe
maybe
I
could
just
start
by
handling
buffers
but
assume
they're
utf-8
and
then,
if
someone
wants
to
add
support
for
utf-16.
B
Those
I
mean
know
what
strings
are:
are
utf-8
right,
so
I
think
utf
like
like.
I
think
this.
If
you're
using
the
string,
if
you're
using
strings
when
you're
using
path
operations,
it
can
support
extended
character,
sets,
I
think,
there's
just
some
character
sets
that
are
different
in
coding.
So
if
you
leave
them
as
the
buffer,
it
keeps
this
it
doesn't.
B
It
works
on
some
obscure
file
systems.
Basically,
because
you
haven't
transformed
the
data
at
all.
I
don't
fully
understand
the
bug.
I
think
it
has
to
do
with,
like
one
specific
japanese
character
set
that
that
came
up,
which
is
why
the
feature
was
added
and
I'm
not
like
great
at
i18n.
So
I
I'm
not
100
sure
that
nuance.
C
Yeah
be
interesting
to
know
the
exact
like
use
case
so
that
we
could
you
know
if,
if
not
supporting
utf-16
doesn't
address
it
then
there's
probably
no
point
in
in
not
doing
the
utf-16
implementation.
B
B
Yeah,
I
think
that
maybe
that
would
have
to
be
when
we
went
and
talked
to
someone
in
the
tsc
about,
because
because
I
think
I
think
it
was
a
blocker
for
who
was
it
a
blocker
for
was
blocker
for
someone
on
the
tsc.
What's
that.
C
I
thought
it
was
james
snell,
yeah.
B
Yeah,
I
think
we've
done
a
good
job
of
kind
of
hammering
out
some
of
the
some
of
the
major
players
of
that
everyone
just
immediately
pulls
in
as
a
dependency
right.
So
what's
next,
actually
I
guess
what
he
said:
he'd
like
next
as
an
argument
parser
that
person
in
the
thread.
B
It
was
neat
they
called
out
like
three
things:
we've
been
related
with
so
like
they
mentioned
random
uid,
which
I
was
pitching
in
on,
and
I
guess
I'll
put
it
towards
the
top
here
since.
B
D
B
Promises
which
james
snell,
I
think,
did
a
lot
of
work
on
mcderp
rimraf,
which
we've
contributed
a
ton
on
fs.copy,
which
is
experimental,
and
then
they
mentioned
random
uid,
which
I
think
means
this
goal
of
working
our
way
down.
Some
of
the
top
dependencies
that
are
really
tiny
and
just
trying
to
to
eliminate
the
the
need
to
build
your
own,
I
think,
is
people
seem
to
appreciate
it.
C
The
like
supply
chain
attack
perspective
is
interesting
on
this.
B
Yeah,
I
mean
I
mean
the
argument
historically
used
to
be
when
that
we
were
definitely
running
into
when
we
first
proposed
mcderpe,
for
instance,
was
kind
of
node
was
built
on
the
ethos
of
kind
of
a
la
carte.
The
mpm
is
the
standard
library,
but
then
what
we're
seeing
is
the
community
evolves
and,
and
matures
and
people
move
on,
like
you
end
up
with
libraries
that
haven't
been
touched
in
some
cases,
eight
years,
which
I
think
the
supply
chain,
this
recent
supply
chain
attack.
B
I
think
it
had
been
touched
in
eight
years,
so
I
don't
know,
I
think,
there's
some
benefit
to
having
a
larger
standard
library.
For
this
specific
use
case.
C
Yeah,
I
agree
you
made
you
said
earlier,
what
what's
next
or
was
that
you
were
but
yeah
yeah.
It's
a
good
question,
probably
something
we
should
discuss
at
some
point.
A
I
don't
think
there
are
any
updates
there.
I
know
you
know
jessica
had
done
some
work
and
then
even
kind
of
updated
the
readme
and
I
I
think,
happy
to
do
more
work,
but
it
wasn't
clear
like
perhaps
what
next
steps
are,
and
now
we
have
a
few
issues.
Open
sorry
go
ahead:
ian
did
that
get
merged.
Did
she
have
that
piano?
Okay,
good
yeah.
C
I'm
willing
to
like
so
I
did
do
that.
Work
on
the
eslint
thing
that
we
want
to
use
for
pkgjs
I'd,
be
happy
to
to
move
that
over
to
that
org
and
like
publish
it,
but
I
don't
have
the
ability
to
do
any
of
that.
So
someone
someone
else
needs
to
help
me
with
that.
But
then
I'm
happy
to
like
integrate
that
and
do
some
work
on
writing
some
tests
for
it
as
well.
A
C
There
are
a
few
tasks
on
there
that
I
kind
of
volunteered
to
take
on.
One
was
like
figuring
out
the
linting
another
one
was
like
getting
code
coverage
set
up,
and
then
you
know
happy
after
that
to
contribute
some
like
tests
and
stuff
as
well.
Cool.
A
Yeah,
I
know
there
are
some
tests
there
already,
but
more
would
certainly
be
great.
I
looked
at
the
issues
earlier
and
another
one
that
comes
to
mind
in
terms
of
more
work
to
do
is
is
putting
in
some
short
op
stuff.
So
you
know
single
dash
work,
so
that
could
be
another
next
step.
If
we
think
that
we
want
that
there
it
sounded
like
we
did
based
on
comments
and
what
I
remember
so.
A
Yeah
testing
coverage,
linting,
short
ops,
error,
error,
message
and
error,
error
handling,
aligning
that
more
with
node.
C
B
B
C
Well,
I
did
the
part
where
we
explored
like
to
extract
it,
which
was
a
little
bit
okay,
but
it
is
done.
B
A
I
think
darcy
you
know
set
up
some
of
the
stuff,
so
that
might
be
a
good
person
to
yeah,
always
put
him
on
twitter
yeah,
michael
dawson
too.
I
talk
to
him
often
so,
if,
if
I
can
ask
him
as
well.
C
B
C
Yeah
I
can,
I
can
talk
to
both
of
those
guys
and
see
see
if
for
sure.
B
C
A
I
agree
yeah,
I
would
defer
to
you
two
perhaps
especially
you
ben
to
like
you
know,
hammer
on
it
a
bit
and
just
make
sure
it's
really
kind
of
ready.
I
mean,
I
know,
there's
not
a
lot
there
there's.
You
know
it
is
what
it
is.
But
I'd
like
to
feel
prepared
before
we
forget
to
note
core
and
you
know
know,
what's
next
yeah.
A
Well,
if
you
want
to
give
it
a
week
or
two,
then
before
you
hammer
on
it,
you
know
ian,
and
I
can
do
some
of
this
other
work
and
just
get
things
sort
of
stable
in
our
own
repo.
B
And
then
that
sounds
good
yeah
I
have
a
standing
thursday
block,
which
is
supposed
to
be
like
an
hour
or
two
of
open
source
programming.
I
just
have
been
missing
it
for
the
last
couple
months,
because
perf
is
such
a
big
thing
at
google.
It
takes
like
an
entire
month
of
your
life,
so
yeah,
but
we're
getting
into
the
holidays
now.
So
it's
a
good
time
to
it's
a
good
time
for
actually
for
me
to
have
a
little
bit
more
down
time
to
work
on
this
kind
of
stuff,
so
cool
cool.
C
I
was
actually
going
to
pull
or
just
copy
the
code
from
parsogs
into
a
new
project
that
I
was
working
on,
building
out
a
new
like
cli
at
work,
and
normally
I
would
just
you
know,
pull
in
yards,
but
I
thought:
hey
just
give
this
a
try
yeah
there
you
go.
B
Then,
in
at
our
at
the
at
the
is
it
what
node
conference
is
it
ian
sorry,
it's
node
interactive?
Was
it
or
what
was
it
again.
D
C
A
C
Yeah
we
cool
to
do
a
talk,
whether
it's
just
about
argument
parsing
or
about
like
the
the
tooling
stuff
that
we've
done
yeah.
That
would
be
great.
I
also
just
today
on
twitter
asked
if
there
was
going
to
be
a
collaborators
summit
at
that
conference,
and
it
sounds
like.
Hopefully,
yes
is
the
answer
so
yeah.
C
A
Something
we
want
to
do
for
sure
how
we
make
it
happen
and
and
what
shape
exactly,
I
think
is
maybe
still
to
be
figured
out,
but
yeah
definitely
would
love
to
be
doing
some
sort
of
collaborative
summit
not
just
for
node,
but
probably
you
know
for
a
variety
of
projects.
There.
C
It
would
be
great,
I
think,
like
to
you
know
what
yeah,
what
do
we
work
on
next?
I
think
it
would
be
great
to
start
putting
some
thought
into
that
and
potentially
discussing
at
some
kind
of
collaborator
summit.
B
I'd
be
interested
in
looking
at
I'd,
be
interested
in
looking
at,
like
the
top
15
mpm
modules
again
and
see
if
there's
any
other
obvious
candidates
that
should
be
are
you
know
pretty
tiny
and
used
ubiquitously
enough
that
it
might
be
worth
pulling
up
into
node
right?
B
B
We
can
turn
right
because,
like
I
think
anything
we
do
in
the
web
platform,
we
should
be
doing
a
node
as
well,
but
sometimes
I
think
it's
worth
considering
doing
it,
making
a
case
for
it,
maybe
in
tc39
or
in
w3c
as
well,
because
that's
something
that
dino
has
been,
I
think
really
concentrating
on,
is
trying
to
be
standards
compliant
right,
yeah.
B
A
D
B
What's
the
one
like
my
pet
thing
that
I
really
wanted
to
advocate
for,
but
I
feel
like
I'm,
what
might
be
the
only
person
doing
it?
It
would
be
having
a
little
bit
of
typescript
syntax
inside
of
javascript.
So
like
not
a
typescript
parser
but
like
a
typescript.
B
It
won't
throw
an
exception
if
you
have
typescript
in
your
code,
so
so
that
you
could
actually
use
typescript
code.
Samples
and
they'd
be
functional
if
you
copy
and
paste
the
node
interpreter
right.
A
B
I
was
just
going
to
say
I'm
kind
of
completely
off
topic
from
the
meeting,
but
I'm
I'm
living
in
canada
now.
So
if
you
do
feel
like
flying
to
toronto,
sometime
ian
I'm
or
both
of
you,
if
because
it's
my
girlfriend
got
across
the
border
pretty
easily
joe,
so
nice
nice,
you
ever
want
to
come
up
for
a
visit.
C
Yeah
sounds
cool
yeah.
I
actually
very
much
want
to
do
that.
I
was
talking
to
darcy
about
that
as
well
kind
of
at
least
for
the
next
few
months,
still
wanting
to
stick
to
canada
for
for
traveling,
so
yeah.
I
actually
was
thinking
about
a
trip
out
to
toronto.
B
A
Yeah,
we
could
have
a
little,
we
could
have
a
little
canadian
summit.
You
know
michael
dawson's
up
there
and
I
mean
he's
in
ottawa,
so
not
super
close,
but
we
could
all
meet
yeah.
D
D
B
Whenever
all
right,
well,
let's
get
an
email
going
about
that,
but
all
right
I
better
go
so
I
can
make
it
to
the
next
meeting
room
all
right.
Well,
see
you
then
take
care
right,
see
you
guys.