Handling data in streams is fundamental to how we build applications. To make streaming work everywhere, the WHATWG Streams Standard (informally known as "Web streams") was designed to establish a common API to work across browsers and servers. It shipped in browsers, was adopted by Cloudflare Workers, Node.js, Deno, and Bun, and became the foundation for APIs like fetch(). It's a significant undertaking, and the people who designed it were solving hard problems with the constraints and tools they had at the time.
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return re.sub(r"\s+", " ", node.get_text(" ", strip=True)).strip()
With normal Smalltalk code, I would explore the system using senders, implementors, inspectors— gradually rebuilding my understanding. Here, that breaks down. The matching syntax lives inside strings, invisible to standard navigation tools. No code completion. No refactorings. No help from the environment.