Most statements and declarations in JavaScript must be terminated with a semicolon, however, for the convenience of the programmer (less typing, stylistic preference, less code noise, lower barrier to entry), semicolons may be omitted in some source text locations, with the runtime automatically inserting semicolons according to a set of rules set-out in the spec.
Over-arching rules: a semicolon is never inserted automatically if the semicolon would then be parsed as an empty statement or if that semicolon would become one of the two semicolons in the header of a for
statement.
Rule 1
A semicolon will be automatically inserted if a token is encountered by the JavaScript parser that both would not be allowed if a semicolon did not exist, and that token is separated from the previous by one or more line terminators (eg. newlines), a closing brace }
, or the final parenthesis ()
) of a do-while loop.
In other words: source text locations where statements would always need to be terminated anyway for a runnable program, will have the statement terminator (;
) inserted automatically if it is omitted. This rule is the heart of ASI.
Rule 2
A semicolon will be inserted at the end of the program if the source text is not otherwise a valid script or module. In other words: programmers can omit the final semicolon in a program.
Rule 3
A semicolon will be automatically inserted if a token is encountered that would normally be allowed if a semicolon did not exist, but exists within one of several special source text locations (restricted productions) that explicitly disallow line terminators within them for reasons of avoiding ambiguity.
The restricted productions inside of which line terminators are prohibited are:
- before postfix
++
and postfix --
(so the unary increment/decrement operators after a newline will bind to the following (not previous) statement, as a prefix operator)
- after
continue
, break
, throw
, return
, yield
- after arrow function parameter lists, and
- after the
async
keyword in async function declarations & expressions, generator function declarations & expressions & methods, and async arrow functions
The spec contains the full details, plus the following practical advice:
The resulting practical advice to ECMAScript programmers is:
A postfix ++ or -- operator should be on the same line as its operand.
An Expression in a return or throw statement or an
AssignmentExpression in a yield
expression should start on the same
line as the return
, throw
, or yield
token.
A LabelIdentifier in a break
or continue
statement should be on the same line as the break
or continue
token.
The end of an arrow function's parameter(s) and its =>
should be on the same line.
The async
token preceding an asynchronous function or method should be on the same line as the immediately following token.
And this is the best article on the Web on this subject.
ASI Gotcha Examples
Starting a line with `(`
The opening parenthesis character has multiple meanings. It can delineate an expression, or it can indicate an invocation (when paired with a closing parenthesis).
For example, the following throws "Uncaught TypeError: console.log(...) is not a function" because the runtime attempts to invoke the return value of console.log('bar')
:
let a = 'foo'
console.log('bar')
(a = 'bam')
One solution for this, if you are generally omitting semicolons, is to include a semicolon to make your intentions unambiguous:
let a = 'foo'
console.log('bar')
;(a = 'bam') // note semicolon at start of line
Starting a line with `[`
The opening bracket character ([
) has multiple meanings. It can indicate an object property access, or it can indicate the literal declaration of an array (when paired with a closing bracket), or it can indicate an array destructuring.
For example, the following throws "Uncaught TypeError: Cannot set properties of undefined (setting 'foo')" because the runtime attempts to set the value of a property named 'foo' on the response of console.log('bar')
:
let a = 'foo'
console.log('bar')
[a] = ['bam']
One solution for this, if you are generally omitting semicolons, is to include a semicolon to make your intentions unambiguous:
let a = 'foo'
console.log('bar')
;[a] = ['bam'] // note semicolon at start of line