❦ 13 juillet 2014 08:50 +0100, Neil Williams <codeh...@debian.org> :
>> > And I've got to ask: for the couple of trivial examples that >> > Frederick pointed out - why on earth do these even exist as >> > libraries instead of being inlined wherever they're needed? >> >> Because, in node, a library is cheap and the functionality get unit >> tested. That's why there are so many dependencies in this ecosystem. > > Unit tests do not preclude inlining. > Unit tests do not preclude aggregation. > > It's all just about multiple blocks of code in dedicated directories > inside a single source package building a single binary package from > which any other package can pick and choose the bits that package needs. > > Just what is wrong with one binary package putting lots of js > in /usr/share/javascript/$library/$version/ and using symlinks in the > bigger package to pull in the files that package wants? Aggregation is not inlining. I was talking about inlining. I have no opinion about aggregation. -- /* Thanks to Rob `CmdrTaco' Malda for not influencing this code in any * way. */ 2.4.3 linux/net/core/netfilter.c
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