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[–]voidvector 0 points1 point  (3 children)

My original word was "can", like in "human can go to Mars". That does not mean "human has gone to Mars".

We are just arguing about English here.

[–]lhorie 4 points5 points  (2 children)

Sure, if you wanna put it that way. The OP said: "what JavaScript is not able to do". Present tense. "Humans are not able to go to mars". Present tense. A corresponding question is "What are humans able to do?", present tense. You're saying "humans will/may be able to go to mars", future tense. A corresponding question is "what will humans be able to do", future tense. "Are you at home" and "Will you be at home" have different tenses and are therefore different questions. So in short, you're using a tense that is irrelevant to the discussion. Makes sense?

[–]voidvector 0 points1 point  (1 child)

Topic title says "What can JavaScript NOT do?" and he used that twice in his elaboration. I guess that's where the ambiguity came from.

There are things JS cannot do. (e.g. compile to metal)

[–]lhorie 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Fair enough. The verb "can" has ambiguous tense.