Yes, there are reasons to not use the fat arrows always. In fact i'd argue in favour of never using fat-arrowed methods :)
Thin-arrow and fat-arrow methods are conceptually different things. The former are compiled to the expected prototype-based JS code; the methods belong to the class prototype. Fat-arrowed methods, on the other hand are associated with each instance in the constructor's code.
The most obvious disadvantage of always using fat-arrowed methods is that it makes each class instance take more memory (because it has more own properties) and its initialization be slower (because it has to create those bound functions and set them each time an instance is created).
Another disadvantage of using fat-arrow methods is that it breaks the usual expectation of what a method is: a method is no longer a function shared between the instances of a class, but it now is a separate function for each instance. This can cause problems if, for example, you'd want to modify a method after it has been defined in the class:
class Foo
# Using fat-arrow method
bar: (x) => alert x
# I have some Foos
foos = (new Foo for i in [1..3])
# And i want to path the bar method to add some logging.
# This might be in another module or file entirely.
oldbar = Foo::bar
Foo::bar = (args...) ->
console.log "Foo::bar called with", args
oldbar.apply @, args
# The console.log will never be called here because the bar method
# has already been bound to each instance and was not modified by
# the above's patch.
foo.bar(i) for foo, i in foos
But the most important disadvantage in my opinion is more subjective: introducing fat-arrow methods makes the code (and the language) unnecessarily inconsistent and difficult to understand.
The code becomes more inconsistent because before introducing fat-arrow methods any time we see <someProp>: <someVal>
in a class definition we know it means "declare a property named <someProp>
with a value <someVal>
in the class' prototype" (unless <someProp> == 'constructor'
, which is a special case), it doesn't matter if <someVal>
is a number or a function, it will just be a property in the prototype. With the introduction of fat-arrowed methods we now have another unnecessary special case: if <someVal>
is a fat-arrowed function it will do a completely different thing than with any other value.
And there's another inconsistency: fat arrows bind the this
differently when they are used in a method definition than when used anywhere else. Instead of preserving the outer this
(which, inside a class
, this
is bound to the class constructor) the this
inside a fat-arrowed method is an object that does not exist when the method is defined (i.e. an instance of the class).
If you mix thin-arrowed and fat-arrowed methods the code also becomes harder to follow because now every time a developer sees a fat-arrowed method they'll ask themselves why was it needed that for that method to be instance-bound. There's no immediate correlation between the method's declaration and where it's being used, which is where the need for fat-arrow method arises.
For all this, i'd recommend to never use fat-arrow methods. Prefer binding the method to an instance where it's going to be used instead of where the method is declared. For example:
# Be explicit about 'onClick' being called on 'someObject':
$someJQueryElement.on 'click', (e) -> someObject.onClick e
# Instead of:
$someJQueryElement.on 'click', someObject.onClick
Or, if you really want to bind the method on every instance on construction time, be explicit about that:
# Instead of fat-arrow methods:
class A
constructor: ->
@bar = 42
foo: =>
console.log @bar
# Assing the method in the constructor, just like you would
# do with any other own property
class A
constructor: ->
@bar = 42
@foo = =>
console.log @bar
I think that in the second definition of class A
it's much more explicit what is happening with the foo
method than in the first definition.
Finally, notice that i'm not arguing against using the fat arrow at all. It's a very useful construct and i use it all the time for normal functions; i just prefer to avoid using it inside a class
method definition :)
Edit: Another case against using fat-arrowed methods: decorator functions:
# A decorator function to profile another function.
profiled = (fn) ->
(args...) ->
console.profile()
fn.apply @, args
console.profileEnd()
class A
bar: 10
# This works as expected
foo: profiled (baz) ->
console.log "@bar + baz:", @bar + baz
# This doesn't
fatArrowedFoo: profiled (baz) =>
console.log "@bar + baz:", @bar + baz
(new A).foo 5 # -> @bar + baz: 15
(new A).fatArrowedFoo 5 # -> @bar + baz: NaN