> And yes popular languages do have real type safe enums.
Right, as we already established, but which is only incredibly narrow support within the features in question. While you can find safety within the scope of enums and enums alone, it blows up as soon as you want the same safety applied to anything else. No popular language comes close to completing these features, doing it half-assed at most. We went over this several times now. Typescript goes a little further than most popular languages, but even it doesn't go very far, leaving all kinds of gaps where the type system does not provide the aforementioned safety.
You clearly know how to read, by your own admission, so why are you flailing around like one of those wacky blow up men at the used car lot? Are you just not familiar with programming?
I am very familiar with programming. The only things you've said so far have been attempts to redefine well-understood terms and now ad hominem and incoherent rambling.
There is no redefinition. You know that because you literally repeated what I said in your comment, so clearly you are accepting of what was said.
Seemingly the almost verbatim repetition, yet presented in a combative form is because you don't have familiarity with programming, and thus can only respond with canned responses that you picked up elsewhere. If you do have familiarity, let's apply it.
So, do you actually want to discuss the topic at hand, or are you here just for a silly fake internet argument?
Right, as we already established, but which is only incredibly narrow support within the features in question. While you can find safety within the scope of enums and enums alone, it blows up as soon as you want the same safety applied to anything else. No popular language comes close to completing these features, doing it half-assed at most. We went over this several times now. Typescript goes a little further than most popular languages, but even it doesn't go very far, leaving all kinds of gaps where the type system does not provide the aforementioned safety.
You clearly know how to read, by your own admission, so why are you flailing around like one of those wacky blow up men at the used car lot? Are you just not familiar with programming?