There is an issue I cannot seem to get away from, even if I'd like to.
Recently I edited a bizarre question from a new JavaScript programmer with some strange ideas. He had a long line where you couldn't really see his double assignment so well. It had a horizontal scroll bar, and unnecessary scroll bars on code excerpts are a pet peeve of mine:
https://stackoverflow.com/posts/26302879/revisions
Having delved (I thought) into semicolon insertion issues, I believed I'd done a legal transformation. A comment appeared, and was upvoted:
Did you check for syntax errors? Because while semi-colons are optional, their omission (given the linebreaks in your shown code) should generate quite a few errors.
So I was the one putting in the linebreaks, here. I asked the commenter to clarify because I didn't think that was an issue. No response was raised.
It was already a sore spot for me, because one of my few on-StackOverflow.com "in the negative total" downvoted questions (since compensated by "meta effect", thanks but stop upvoting it) was this one:
Are there semicolon insertion dangers with continuing operators on next line?
I bountied it for 100 points just to draw attention to it enough to get it upvoted from the negative, because I didn't feel like whining on Meta. And the bounty raised it to zero and I thought the issue was settled. Now I feel like whining, because that question just got downvoted again, and I still don't have a response from the person who said the newlines were a problem in the other (seemingly unrelated) edit.
(The code has problems, of course, but I don't believe the newlines added any new ones.)
Am I on crack and/or is this JavaScript cargo cult behavior? Note the "That is rubbish." answer to my claim that it's often recited. If it's rubbish, why do I see this so frequently?
If it's rubbish, why do I see this so frequently?
Probably because of people encountering the behavior but not understanding all the cases where it can or cannot happen.goto
in the code, see how that pans out :)new
(though it's not really needed), butwith
kills performance, andgoto
doesn't even work in javascript.window.undefined
with some value it shouldn't have. ES5 fixes that by makingwindow.undefined
unwritable - but it's still a silent error.