Comment by halflife
2 months ago
And then when node is updated and natively supports set intersections you would go back to your copied code and fix it?
2 months ago
And then when node is updated and natively supports set intersections you would go back to your copied code and fix it?
If it works, why do so? Unless there's a clear performance boost, and if so you already know the code and can quickly locate your interpreted version.
Or At the time of adding you can add a NOTE or FIXME comment stating where you copied it from. A quick grep for such keyword can give you a nice overview of nice to have stuff. You can also add a ticket with all the details if you're using a project management tool and resuscitate it when that hypothetical moment happens.
If you won't, do you expect the maintainer of some micro package to do that?