If JavaScript represents its source as a string, and a string is a primitive data type in JS, and eval(string) evaluates a program... 1/
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@wycats because you still have to parse the string and then interpret it. In lisp you can interpret the already parsed S-expression -
@_Felipe you interpret a JS source by evalling the source string. No intermediate steps. -
@wycats I see what you mean. But how can I have access to the objects defined by the syntax?
End of conversation
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@wycats@myronmarston to understand first you must listen, grasshopper.Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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