/jsProxy

Primary LanguageJavaScriptMIT LicenseMIT

jsProxy

ES6 Features - Use cases for Proxy

The blog is no longer available, but I strongly recommend that you follow along the archived blog post and look at the examples one by one.

You should use a recent browser, preferably Chrome.

Some examples require that the code is running on a webserver and not opened from the filesystem. You can use the simple http-server npm module for that. Just start serving and navigate to http://localhost:8080.

If you don't want to bother hosting it for yourself, you can use our GitHub-hosted page instead.