I haven't worked full-time with JavaScript for a while (mainly because my code is bug free) so I was a bit surprised to run across some example JavaScript code that didn't include semicolons at the end of each statement. It didn't look right.
I turned to Google, searching "javascript semicolon".
This question was the first result:
The question was locked by Jeff five years ago.
This question exists because it has historical significance, but it is not considered a good, on-topic question for this site, so please do not use it as evidence that you can ask similar questions here. This question and its answers are frozen and cannot be changed.
I hereby explicitly dispute that this question is not both good and on-topic on Stack Overflow. It should be restored to its former glory and unlocked from its unfair imprisonment.
[I also couldn't see any other way to flag or otherwise the question to the attention of a mod.]
Just to spell out the arguments for this question being on-topic:
- I just encountered, as a programmer engaged in programming, the nominal subject of this site, example code for a pretty nice project, that inspired the exact question.
- The question is the top search result for a reasonable first Google search aimed at answering the actual real-life question I wanted to know.
Also, per the current help:
- The question is "a specific programming problem"
- It is "a practical, answerable problem that is unique to software development"
- It is not "seeking debugging help"
- It is a problem that can 'still be reproduced' (tho funnily it kind of is a "typographical error")
- It is not asking for "homework help"
- It is not asking for a recommendation for an "off-site resource" (because how dare we care about anything other than our dear sweet SO)
Neither is this a subjective question. As the existing answers demonstrate there are specific concrete cases where semicolons or the lack thereof significantly change the behavior of the code.
Maybe Jeff thought the question was soliciting opinions. That's not the case; there's a real answer.