id,user,created_at,full_text,retweeted_status,quoted_status,place,source,truncated,display_text_range,in_reply_to_status_id,in_reply_to_user_id,in_reply_to_screen_name,geo,coordinates,contributors,is_quote_status,retweet_count,favorite_count,favorited,retweeted,possibly_sensitive,lang,scopes 1420211877276049408,33521530,2021-07-28T02:37:52+00:00,"@matiasfha @Rich_Harris @stolinski @gndx Svelte also has one way data flow under the hood, but uses binding and syntax sugar to simulate LOCAL two way data flow. its not that different. data propagation with stores vs context however are very different.",,,,95f3aaaddaa45937ac94765e0ddb68ba2be92d20,0,"[41, 255]",1420201456108441603,12816182,matiasfha,,,,0,2,24,0,0,,en, 1420261009583788032,33521530,2021-07-28T05:53:06+00:00,@matiasfha @Rich_Harris @stolinski @gndx btw you can implement the same thing for React too. its just that the React core team prefers boilerplate to sugar syntax. https://twitter.com/swyx/status/1294310598419689472?lang=en,,1294310598419689472,,1f89d6a41b1505a3071169f8d0d028ba9ad6f952,0,"[41, 187]",1420216170402091009,12816182,matiasfha,,,,1,1,5,0,0,0,en,