The history of TypeScript
Transforming small web applications into thick monolithic clients was not possible due to the limitations of earlier JavaScript versions, such as the ECMAScript 5 specification. In a nutshell, large-scale JavaScript applications suffered from serious maintainability and scalability problems as soon as they grew in size and complexity. This issue became more relevant as new libraries and modules required seamless integration into our applications. The lack of proper mechanisms for interoperability led to cumbersome solutions that never seemed to fit the bill.
As a response to these concerns, ECMAScript 6 (also known as ES6 or ES2015) promised to solve these issues by introducing better module loading functionalities, an improved language architecture for better scope handling, and a wide variety of syntactic sugar to better manage types and objects. The introduction of class-based programming turned into an opportunity to embrace a more OOP approach when...