We originally started following the convention of naming JS files .es6.js to differentiate between files that used modern JS and legacy files that required different handling. Is there any reason to keep doing that? Can we shorten file names to just .js?
We originally started following the convention of naming JS files
.es6.js
to differentiate between files that used modern JS and legacy files that required different handling. Is there any reason to keep doing that? Can we shorten file names to just.js
?