Is there an operator that would allow the following logic (on line 4
) to be expressed more succinctly?
const query = succeed => (succeed? {value: 4} : undefined);
let value = 3;
for (let x of [true, false]) {
try { value = query(x).value; } catch {} // <-- Don´t assign if no .value
}
console.log(value);
The output is 4
. If there is no .value
field in the response, I want to keep the old value
/ don´t want the assignment to execute.
Notes:
- If
value = query(x)?.value
were used, it would assignundefined
tovalue
- There is also the
??=
operator, however it isn´t useful here,value ??= ...
would only assign ifvalue
is currentlynull
/undefined
- In CoffeeScript,
value = query(x).value if query(x)?.value?
achieves the desired behaviour withouttry
/catch
, although it's repetitive value = query(x)?.value ?? value
works but isn't conditional assignment, the assignment still happens, if we were setting anObject
's property the setter would be called unnecessarily. It is also repetitive- This logic cannot be abstracted into a function i.e.
value = smart(query(x), "value")
, the assignment can´t be made conditional that way
Keywords?
null propagation, existence operator
if( obj?.nested?.property?.value )
instead ofif( obj && obj.nested && obj.nested.property && obj.nested.property.value )
var appConfig = loadConfig(config, process.env); connect(appConfig.database);
toconnect(config)
. You can pass a much simpler object toconnect
instead of passing the wholeconfig
object, you can useconf.username
,conf.password
instead of attempting something likeconfig[process.env]?.database?.username
,config[process.env]?.database?.password
. Reference: Law of Demeter.loadConfig
in the example above), you can make assumptions about the existence of properties and skip null checking in countless areas of your app.