w3c / tpac2024-breakouts

Repository set up to collect and organize breakout session proposals for TPAC 2024
3 stars 0 forks source link

Sourcemaps, Security, devices, & more: What you may have missed from TC39 & Ecma #85

Open gesa opened 2 months ago

gesa commented 2 months ago

Session description

Lots of people who are tuned into internet-relevant standards know about TC39, the technical committee within Ecma International that specifies ECMAScript® (JavaScript™). What you may not know is that TC39 is broken up into 5 Task Groups, only one of which is responsible for the core standard, ECMA-262. Ecma is also home to TC53, another technical committee focussed on ECMAScript® in embedded systems. Join me to hear about the rest of Ecma’s work on ECMAScript: Internationalization, Security, Sourcemaps, Experiments in programming language standardization, and ECMAScript® modules for embedded systems.

Session goal

Spread knowledge of JavaScript outside of the Web APIs, identify areas where Ecma & W3C could be working together.

Additional session chairs (Optional)

No response

Who can attend

Anyone may attend (Default)

IRC channel (Optional)

ecmascript

Other sessions where we should avoid scheduling conflicts (Optional)

No response

Instructions for meeting planners (Optional)

No response

Agenda for the meeting.

Links to calendar

Meeting materials

tpac-breakout-bot commented 2 months ago

Thank you for proposing a session!

You may update the session description as needed and at any time before the meeting, but please keep in mind that tooling relies on issue formatting: follow the instructions and leave all headings and other formatting intact in particular. Bots and W3C meeting organizers may also update the description, to fix formatting issues or add links and other relevant information. Please do not revert these changes. Feel free to use comments to raise questions.

Do not expect formal approval; W3C meeting organizers endeavor to schedule all proposed sessions that are in scope for a breakout. Actual scheduling should take place shortly before the meeting.