I've seen different developers include semicolons after functions in javascript and some haven't. Which is best practice?
function weLikeSemiColons(arg) {
// bunch of code
};
or
function unnecessary(arg) {
// bunch of code
}
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I've seen different developers include semicolons after functions in javascript and some haven't. Which is best practice?
or
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Semicolons after function declarations are not necessary at all. The grammar of a
There's no semicolon grammatically required, but might wonder why? Semicolons serve to separate statements from each other, and a
The terms "function declaration" and "function statement" are often wrongly used interchangeably, because there is no function statement described in the ECMAScript Specification, however there are some implementations that include a function statement in their grammar, -notably Mozilla- but again this is non-standard. However semicolons are always recommended where you use
If you ommit the semicolon after the first function in the above example, you will get completely undesired results:
The the first function will be executed immediately, because the parentheses sorrounding the second one, will be interpreted as the Recommended lectures:
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JS Lint is de-facto convention, and it says no semicolon after function body. |
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I use them after function-as-variable declarations:
but not after classical-style definitions:
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Really just depends on your preference. I like to end lines of code with semi colons because I'm used to Java, C++, C#, etc, so I use the same standards for coding in javascript. I don't typically end function declarations in semi colons though, but that is just my preference. The browsers will run it either way, but maybe some day they'll come up with some stricter standards governing this. Example of code I would write:
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Just stay consistent! They are not needed, but I personally use them because most minification techniques rely on the semi-colon (for instance, Packer). |
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It's actually more than an issue of convention or consistency. I'm fairly certain that not placing semicolons after every statement slows down the internal parser because it has to figure out where the end of the statement is. I wish I had some handy numbers for you to positively confirm that, but maybe you can google it yourself. :) Also, when you are compressing or minifying code, a lack of semi-colons can lead to a minified version of your script that doesn't do what you wanted because all the white space goes away. |
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