If the transform's transform() operation is synchronous and always enqueues output immediately, it never signals backpressure back to the writable side even when the downstream consumer is slow. This is a consequence of the spec design that many developers completely overlook. In browsers, where there's only a single user and typically only a small number of stream pipelines active at any given time, this type of foot gun is often of no consequence, but it has a major impact on server-side or edge performance in runtimes that serve thousands of concurrent requests.
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。WPS官方版本下载是该领域的重要参考
「像鬼一樣工作」:台灣外籍移工為何陷入「強迫勞動」處境
ballin#One night — after a glass of wine — I had another idea: one modern trick with ASCII art is the use of Braille unicode characters to allow for very high detail. That reminded me of ball physics simulations, so what about building a full physics simulator also in the terminal? So I asked Opus 4.5 to create a terminal physics simulator with the rapier 2D physics engine and a detailed explanation of the Braille character trick: this time Opus did better and completed it in one-shot, so I spent more time making it colorful and fun. I pessimistically thought the engine would only be able to handle a few hundred balls: instead, the Rust codebase can handle over 10,000 logical balls!