2011/1/12 Platonides Platonides@gmail.com
MZMcBride wrote:
Doesn't it make much more sense to fix the underlying problem instead?
Users
shouldn't have to be concerned with the number of #ifexists on a page.
MZMcBride
Ok, now I feel myself much more comfortable. These my conclusions:
# I can feel myself free to test anything even if exotic. # I will pay attention to html rendering time when trying something exotic. # In the remote case that I really build something server-expensive, and such exotic thing "infects" largely wiki projects (a very remote case!), some sysop would see bad results of a bad idea and: ## will fix the parser code, if the idea is good, but the software manages it with a low level of efficience; ## will kill the idea, if the idea is server expensive and simply unuseful or wrong.
Alex