ES2015 brings us some new syntax sugar that will likely make you stop using Function.prototype.bind()
.
Arrow functions are just a function shorthand using the =>
syntax.
// es5
var myFn = function(x) {
return x + 1;
};
// es6
const myFn = x => {
return x + 1;
};
Arrow functions are syntactically similar to the related feature that exists in other languages like CoffeeScript, Java (8+), C#…
They support both expression and statement bodies. In our example above, we have seen a classic statement. But for simple function, we can use an simple expression, to make things shorter. That means that the previous example can be also written like this:
const myFn = x => x + 1;
Note that when you have only one argument, you can omit parenthesis around it. So we can also wrote the example like this
const myFn = x => x + 1;
And you can also wrap the body in parenthesis if you want to make a multiline expression
const myFn = x => x + 1; // that can be multilines, you can imagine some JSX here ;)
So this examples are all the same :
const myFn = x => {
return x + 1;
};
// ===
const myFn = x => x + 1;
// ===
const myFn = x => x + 1;
// ===
const myFn = x => x + 1;
In practice you will use this small functions in method like Array reduce/filter/map etc.
const nums = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
const odds = nums.filter(v => v % 2); // [1, 3, 5]
const oddsSum = odds.reduce((sum, v) => sum + v, 0); // 9
Yes your read correctly: unlike functions, arrows function share the same lexical this as their surrounding code. So that means the this
you might use use in the body of an arrow function refer to the parent scope:
const Someone = {
name: “MoOx”,
friends: [], // he got no friends atm :(
printFriends() {
this._friends.forEach(f =>
console.log(this._name + " knows " + f)
// `this` is not the function of the forEach !
)
}
}
By reading this code, you might understand that you are likely to stop using bind()
:
import React, { Component } from “react”
class Stuff extends Component {
// old way
onClick(e) {
this.setState({ omg: false })
}
render() {
return (
<div>
{ /* old way */ }
<button onClick={ this.onClick.bind(this) }>
Old binded call
</button>
{ /* LOOK MA', NO BIND ! */ }
<button onClick={ (e) => this.onClick(e) }>
I don’t need `bind` anymore !
</button>
{ /* Simpler way */ }
<button onClick={ (e) => this.setState({ omg: true }) }>
Hell yeah
</button>
</div>
)
}
}
If you want to return an object you might be surprised to get undefined
with this code:
const aFn = obj => {
key: obj.value;
};
Indeed the above snippet could be translated into ES5 this way:
var aFn = function(obj) {
// Defines a label named `key`
key: obj.value; // Gets `obj.value`
// Implicit returns `undefined`
};
Keep in mind that in this context, a brace is to start a statement body, not an object. So you will need this:
const aFn = obj => {
return { key: obj.value };
};
But wait, there is a trick: a stupid couple of parenthesis.
const aFn = obj => ({ key: obj.value }); // It works!
Take a look to the compatibility table. You will see that arrow functions are already supported by most browsers but you might need Babel to use it today.
You will probably use this more and more. Even if function
keyword is not dead, arrow functions =>
are probably going to be a thing !