Probably academic, but here's an answer which is pure JavaScript. You can use something like this to strip some functions from your code completely, and depending on your compiler, will compile to nothing.
/** @const */
var NDEBUG = false; // change to true for production
var assert = (() => NDEBUG ? () => {}: test => console.assert(test(), test.toString()))();
If NDEBUG == true
then assert becomes an empty function: () => {}
, otherwise if NDEBUG == false
, it takes a function as an argument, calls that function and tests the result.
Usage:
var divideByResult = function (a, b) {
assert (() => b() !== 0);
return a() / b();
}
This works like a C style assert. The function inside the assert only gets called if NDEBUG == false
. We pass a function to assert rather than an expression. If we passed an expression, the expression b() !== 0
may have side effects and will be evaluated. This way, we guarantee that the expression inside the assert is never evaluated in production code, and an optimising compiler can safely remove the assert as dead code.
console.log
's but it depends on what you consider to be debugging code.grunt
you may usestrip-code
task.gulp
as your task runner. You could installnpm strip-debug
plugin and add the task to your gulpfile. I thinkgrunt
also has this option.