I tried looking this up and did not find an answer. Is there any reason to use _
over ()
when passing in 0 parameters in an arrow function? Just asking out of curiosity.
// ...(() => {}) vs (_ => {})
The differences are:
_
creates an identifier for the _
variable. (In rare circumstances, this may be confusing if one is using a library which assigns to window._
, like underscore.js)_
means that parentheses aren't needed. (In contrast, declaring a function with zero arguments requires an empty parameter list with ()
) Some like saving on a character by using _
instead.(One could have, equivalently, used any other argument name like z
which then goes unused - but the convention for an unused variable is to use _
)
If one isn't using a library that assigns to window._
, then the _
parameter won't shadow it, so both options work just fine. Feel free to choose whichever strikes your fancy.
Note that a common linting rule forbids the declaration of unused parameters, and will require ()
instead of _
.
_
is 0 parameters. It means there is an argument but you are ignoring it.