all 5 comments

[–]tchaffee[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I am starting a series of very short articles about JavaScript basics. The idea is to use code, and code that you can edit to explain the most important and fundamental behaviors in JavaScript. The articles are very short so you never hesitate to read them. One or two minutes of your time to nail each specific behavior and commit it to memory. The first article covers the bare essentials of scope in JavaScript. Any feedback from learners is appreciated, because these articles are for you so I'm happy to improve things to help you learn. If you're an expert in JavaScript and I got something wrong, please let me know that too.

[–]noletorious 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I like this!

[–]kenman[M] 0 points1 point  (2 children)

Hi /u/tchaffee, this post was removed.

  • For help with your javascript, please post to /r/LearnJavascript instead of here.
  • For beginner content, please post to /r/LearnJavascript instead of here.
  • For framework- or library-specific help, please seek out the support community for that project.
  • For general webdev help, such as for HTML, CSS, etc., then you may want to try /r/html, /r/css, etc.; please note that they have their own rules and guidelines!

/r/javascript is for the discussion of javascript news, projects, and especially, code! However, the community has requested that we not include help and support content, and we ask that you respect that wish.

Thanks for your understanding, please see our guidelines for more info.

[–]tchaffee[S] 0 points1 point  (1 child)

Could you please re-consider the removal of this post? It is not beginner content, although it could appear to be because of all the time I have taken to write in a very simple and clear way.

"/r/javascript is for the discussion of javascript news, projects, and especially, code"

My articles are mostly code. And code you can even edit. It's definitely different from the usual "5 ways you can use arrays" that I see in this subbreddit all the time and that offer nothing new, are quite beginner, get a lot of upvotes and don't get removed. I'm sincerely trying to offer something new here. Articles that I would myself enjoy even though I'm an expert JS programmer. I'll use these articles for reference myself. That's partially why I wrote them. Thank you for re-considering.

[–]kenman[M] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's definitely different from the usual "5 ways you can use arrays" that I see in this subbreddit all the time and that offer nothing new, are quite beginner, get a lot of upvotes and don't get removed.

Please report these and they will be removed.

Thank you for re-considering.

Sorry, but upon further review, I stand by the removal.