Right, but it exists and looks correct and runs and won’t trigger any kind of error if you write code that uses it.
This is what we call a ‘foot gun’.
On the other hand, you notice it the second you go use the software you just wrote to ensure it works.
So it’s more like a foot dollar store water gun.
No, it's a proper footgun, same as dereferencing a nullptr in C++. You'll notice that too - doesn't mean it's not a footgun.
And, in fact, most C++ compilers today will actually warn you when you derefernence a nullptr in a stupid, obvious way. Evidently, JS has not caught up to this incredibly sophisticated technology /s.
JS has caught up - it has a sophisticated compilation and linting ecosystem called ‘TypeScript’.
Which at least will tell you you’re using a deprecated API, but won’t overcome the dumb API naming choices JavaScript blindly imported from Java
`getYear` is literally deprecated everywhere and is not part of the spec.
https://tc39.es/ecma262/multipage/numbers-and-dates.html#sec...