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boscillator | 6 months ago
I assume java gets around this by bundling libraries into the deployed .jar file. That this is better than a lock file, but doesn't make sense for scripting languages that don't have a build stage. (You won't have trouble convincing me that every language should have a proper build stage, but you might have trouble convincing the millions of lines of code already written in languages that don't.)
shadowgovt|6 months ago
Python says "Yes." Every environment manager I've seen, if your version ranges don't overlap for all your dependencies, will end up failing to populate the environment. Known issue; some people's big Python apps just break sometimes and then three or four open source projects have to talk to each other to un-fsck the world.
npm says "No" but in a hilarious way: if lib-a emits objects from lib-x, and lib-b emits objects from lib-x, you'll end up with objects that all your debugging tools will tell you should be the same type, and TypeScript will statically tell you are the same type, but don't `instanceof` the way you'd expect two objects that are the same type should. Conclusion: `instanceof` is sus in a large program; embrace the duck typing (and accept that maybe your a-originated lib-x objects can't be passed to b-functions without explosions because I bet b didn't embrace the duck-typing).
aidenn0|6 months ago
You are wrong; Maven just picks one of lib-x:0.1.4 or lib-x:0.1.5 depending on the ordering of the dependency tree.
Tadpole9181|6 months ago
Java dependency management is unhinged, antiquated garbage to anyone who has used any other ecosystem.
yladiz|6 months ago