whatever you tend to achieve here is wrong. Ternary expressions shall not be used as a full statement, only in expression, so the answer to your question is:
none of your suggestions, instead do:
var a = 2;
if (a === 1)
alert(1)
// else do nothing!
then the code is easily understandable, readable and as much efficient as it can get.
Why make it more difficult, when it can be simple?
edit:
So then, does a "no-operation" command basically indicate an inferior code structure?
You're missing my point. All the above is about the ternary expression x ? y : z
.
But, a no operation command does not makes sense in higher level languages such as Javascript.
It is usually used, in lower level languages such as assembly or C, as a way to make the processor do nothing for one instruction for timing purposes.
In JS, whether you do 0;
, null;
, function () {};
or an empty statement, there are great chances that it will be ignored by the interpretor when it is reading it, but before it gets interpreted, so in the end, you'll just make your program be loaded more slowly by a really tiny amount of time. Nota Bene: I'm assuming this, as I'm not involved in any widely used JS interpreter, and there are chances each interpreter has its own strategy.
In case you use something a bit more complicated, like $.noop()
or var foo = function () {}; foo()
, then the interpreter may do an unuseful function call that will end up spoiling a few bytes of your function stack, and a few cycles.
The only reason I see a function such as $.noop()
would exist, would be to be able to still give a callback function to some event function that would throw an exception if it can't call that callback. But then, it's necessarily a function you need to give, and giving it the noop
name is a good idea so you're telling your readers (and that may be you in 6 months) that you purposely give an empty function.
In the end, there's no such thing as "inferior" or "superior" code structure. You're either right or wrong in the way you use your tools.. Using a ternary for your example is like using a hammer when you want to screw. It'll work, but you're not sure you can hang something on that screw.
What could be considered either "inferior" or "superior" is the algorithm and ideas you put in your code. But that's another thing.
0
are effectively any better (or worse). I'd say the right thing to do isif (a === 1) doSomething();
and not use? :
when it doesn't make sense.if (statement) action; else ;
false
or0
will work;null
is a nice way to express no-op.