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A resourceful newsletter featuring the latest and most important news, articles, books and updates in the world of #javascript 🚀 Don't miss our Quizzes! Let's chat: @nairihar

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📈 Análisis del canal de Telegram JavaScript

El canal JavaScript (@javascript) en el segmento lingüístico de Inglés es un actor destacado. Actualmente la comunidad reúne a 31 441 suscriptores, ocupando la posición 4 382 en la categoría Tecnologías y Aplicaciones y el puesto 13 579 en la región India.

📊 Métricas de audiencia y dinámica

Desde su creación el невідомо, el proyecto ha mostrado un crecimiento acelerado, reuniendo a 31 441 suscriptores.

Según los últimos datos del 12 junio, 2026, el canal mantiene una actividad estable. En los últimos 30 días la variación de miembros fue de -211, y en las últimas 24 horas de -26, conservando un alto alcance.

  • Estado de verificación: No verificado
  • Tasa de interacción (ER): El promedio de interacción de la audiencia es 6.22%. Durante las primeras 24 horas tras publicar, el contenido suele obtener 2.53% de reacciones respecto al total de suscriptores.
  • Alcance de las publicaciones: Cada publicación recibe en promedio 1 955 visualizaciones. En el primer día suele acumular 794 visualizaciones.
  • Reacciones e interacción: La audiencia responde de forma activa: el promedio de reacciones por publicación es 7.
  • Intereses temáticos: El contenido se centra en temas clave como javascript, console.log(gen.next().value, processdata, remix, acc.

📝 Descripción y política de contenido

El autor describe el recurso como un espacio para expresar opiniones subjetivas:
A resourceful newsletter featuring the latest and most important news, articles, books and updates in the world of #javascript 🚀 Don't miss our Quizzes! Let's chat: @nairihar

Gracias a la alta frecuencia de actualizaciones (últimos datos recibidos el 13 junio, 2026), el canal mantiene la vigencia y un amplio alcance. La analítica demuestra que la audiencia interactúa activamente con el contenido, lo que lo convierte en un punto de referencia dentro de la categoría Tecnologías y Aplicaciones.

31 441
Suscriptores
-2624 horas
-807 días
-21130 días
Archivo de publicaciones
CHALLENGE
const handler = {
  get(target, prop, receiver) {
    if (prop in target) {
      return Reflect.get(target, prop, receiver) * 2;
    }
    return `Missing: ${prop}`;
  },
  set(target, prop, value) {
    if (typeof value !== "number") {
      throw new TypeError("Only numbers allowed");
    }
    return Reflect.set(target, prop, Math.abs(value));
  },
};

const store = new Proxy({ gold: 10, silver: 5 }, handler);

store.bronze = -42;

console.log(store.gold);
console.log(store.bronze);
console.log(store.platinum);

What is the output?
Anonymous voting

CHALLENGE
function highlight(strings, ...values) {
  return strings.reduce((result, str, i) => {
    const value = values[i - 1];
    const formatted =
      typeof value === "number"
        ? `[${value * 2}]`
        : `<${String(value).toUpperCase()}>`;
    return result + formatted + str;
  });
}

const language = "javascript";
const year = 2015;
const feature = "templates";

const output = highlight`Language: ${language}, introduced in ${year}, feature: ${feature}!`;
console.log(output);

What is the output?
Anonymous voting

CHALLENGE
const curry = (fn) => {
  const arity = fn.length;
  return function curried(...args) {
    if (args.length >= arity) {
      return fn(...args);
    }
    return (...moreArgs) => curried(...args, ...moreArgs);
  };
};

const volume = (l, w, h) => l * w * h;
const curriedVolume = curry(volume);

const withLength5 = curriedVolume(5);
const withLength5Width3 = withLength5(3);

console.log(typeof withLength5);
console.log(typeof withLength5Width3);
console.log(withLength5Width3(4));
console.log(curriedVolume(2)(6)(7));

What is the output?
Anonymous voting

CHALLENGE

const obj = {
  name: "Quantum",
  regular: function () {
    return this.name;
  },
  arrow: () => {
    return this?.name;
  },
  nested: function () {
    const inner = () => this.name;
    return inner();
  },
};

console.log(obj.regular());
console.log(obj.arrow());
console.log(obj.nested());

What is the output?
Anonymous voting

CHALLENGE

"use strict";

function createCounter() {
  let count = 0;

  return {
    increment() { count++; },
    getCount() { return count; },
    reset: function() { count = 0; }
  };
}

const counter = createCounter();
counter.increment();
counter.increment();
counter.increment();

const { getCount, reset } = counter;

try {
  reset();
  console.log("After reset:", counter.getCount());
} catch (e) {
  console.log("Error:", e.message);
}

console.log("Direct call:", counter.getCount());

What is the output?
Anonymous voting

CHALLENGE

const operations = {
  add: (a, b) => a + b,
  subtract: (a, b) => a - b,
  multiply: (a, b) => a * b,
  divide: (a, b) => b !== 0 ? a / b : null,
};

const pipeline = (...fns) => (value) => fns.reduce((acc, fn) => fn(acc), value);

const double  = (x) => operations.multiply(x, 2);
const addTen  = (x) => operations.add(x, 10);
const halve   = (x) => operations.divide(x, 2);
const subtractThree = (x) => operations.subtract(x, 3);

const transform = pipeline(double, addTen, halve, subtractThree);

console.log(transform(5));

👀 The Three Pillars of JavaScript Bloat Three reasons your node_modules is huge: needless ES3-era compat packages, micro-lib
👀 The Three Pillars of JavaScript Bloat Three reasons your node_modules is huge: needless ES3-era compat packages, micro-libraries with a single consumer, and ponyfills for APIs that shipped years ago! James, known for the e18e ecosystem performance project, offers some ways to calm the chaos. James Garbutt

What is the output?
Anonymous voting

CHALLENGE

const obj = {
  name: "Orion",
  greet() {
    const inner = () => {
      console.log(this.name);
    };
    inner();
  },
  greetRegular: function () {
    const inner = function () {
      console.log(this?.name ?? "undefined");
    };
    inner();
  },
};

obj.greet();
obj.greetRegular();

🥶 Announcing TypeScript 6.0 Over six months in the making, TypeScript 6.0 is designed to bridge the gap between its self-hos
🥶 Announcing TypeScript 6.0 Over six months in the making, TypeScript 6.0 is designed to bridge the gap between its self-hosted compiler and the (almost ready) Go-powered native compiler of TypeScript 7.0 . There are new features (Temporal improvements, RegExp.escape, and more), but most important are the changes to help you prepare for 7.0: • Numerous default changes: strict is now true, module is esnext, rootDir defaults to ., and more. • A change that will affect many apps is types defaulting to [] rather than pulling in everything from node_modules/@types. • Numerous deprecations: the es5 target, emitting AMD, UMD, and SystemJS modules, --baseUrl, and others. • --stableTypeOrdering makes 6.0's type ordering behavior match 7.0's to help diagnose inference differences as you update. Daniel Rosenwasser (Microsoft)

What is the output?
Anonymous voting

CHALLENGE
const compose = (...fns) => fns.reduce((f, g) => (...args) => f(g(...args)));

const pipe = (...fns) => fns.reduce((f, g) => (...args) => g(f(...args)));

const double  = x => x * 2;
const addTen  = x => x + 10;
const square  = x => x * x;
const negate  = x => -x;

const transform1 = compose(negate, square, addTen, double);
const transform2 = pipe(double, addTen, square, negate);

const val = 3;

console.log(transform1(val), transform2(val));

What is the output?
Anonymous voting

CHALLENGE

const a = 10n ** 3n;
const b = BigInt(Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER) + 1n;
const c = b + 1n;

console.log(typeof a);
console.log(a === 1000n);
console.log(b === c);
console.log(5n / 2n);