On top of what Kaiido wrote about the question looking trivial, lacking research and serves no obvious use case, it does not even strike me as something helping to understand the language either. To be completely honest, the question just looks like you got a sudden thought in your head and immediately threw yourself on the keyboard to type a question about it.
To me, your question is a bit like asking if there's a negative number that's greater than 5. Or if there is an "identity parameter" for a command that creates a file with its own file name as the content.
But I have to admit that for some reason I cannot explain, I still find your question a bit fascinating. I guess it at least partly is because I'm very fond of mathematics.
An advice for the future. If you wonder something about programming that lacks use case and only is for curiosity, then say it. Make it clear that your aim isn't to use it in production code.
I quite often ask questions about the intricacies of C. That's a language where it's quite good to know if something is legal or not, even if you have no intention of using the "features". A good use case for this knowledge is to know which things to prioritize when you refactor a code base. Here are some examples of my questions:
Is it UB to return a pointer to local variable?
Is it ok to pass an int array to scanf and printf when using the %s specifier?
Is it safe to do something like foo(x, &x)?
Is it undefined behavior to use functions with side effects in an unspecified order?
Symbol
will, indeed, help you with that) and then check for the presence of the brand but there is nothing that would work "out-of-the-box" so to speak[ ...[1,2,3], ...[] ]
is the same as[1,2,3]
which makes[]
an identity element. However, the knowledge of this is pragmatically [1/2][1,2,3].push(...[])
. And the only thing that comes to mind regarding plain objects isObject.assign({ a:1, b:2 }, {})
[in-place] or spread properties ({ ...{ a:1,b:2 }, ...{} }
) [creating a copy]Set
andMap
built-in objects