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Comment by dsherret

5 hours ago

The benefit is you can easily scale the complexity of the file. An .sh file is great for simple commands, but with a .ts file with Deno you can pull in a complex dependency with one line and write logic more succinctly.

> The benefit is you can easily scale the complexity of the file. An .sh file is great for simple commands, but with a .ts file with Deno you can pull in a complex dependency with one line and write logic more succinctly.

The use-case, as per the author's stated requirements, was to do away with pressing up arrow or searching history.

Exactly what benefit does Make.ts provide over Make.sh in this use-case? I mean, I didn't choose what the use-case it, the author did, and according to the use-case chosen by him, this is horrible over-engineered, horribly inefficient, much more fragile, etc.