Pretty much.

I'd imagine you'd want to have a good strategy for running code in a
sandbox and being able to rollback to the last state should you introduce a
coding error.

Doesn't sound like a lot of fun.

On Wed, Apr 25, 2012 at 4:38 PM, Mark Hahn <[email protected]> wrote:

> >  You can just keep executing JavaScript code in the context of a
> browser window after page load and it will just evaluate.
>
> Oh, so it is as simple as defining a function over again?  Will references
> to the old function stay pointed to the old function and any closure?  So
> callbacks stored away will still call the old one?
>
> If so, then you will have old and new running at the same time.  I guess
> this is reality and one will just have to be careful with changes.  Of
> course one would have to be careful with changes in any live-change
> scenario.
>
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Marak Squires
Co-founder and Chief Evangelist
Nodejitsu, Inc.
[email protected]

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