Omitting the second expression when using the if-else shorthand
Can I write the if else
shorthand without the else
?
var x=1;
x==2 ? dosomething() : doNothingButContinueCode();
I've noticed putting null
for the else works (but I have no idea why or if that's a good idea).
Edit: Some of you seem bemused why I'd bother trying this. Rest assured it's purely out of curiosity. I like messing around with JavaScript.
Solution 1:
What you have is a fairly unusual use of the ternary operator. Usually it is used as an expression, not a statement, inside of some other operation, e.g.:
var y = (x == 2 ? "yes" : "no");
So, for readability (because what you are doing is unusual), and because it avoids the "else" that you don't want, I would suggest:
if (x==2) doSomething();
Solution 2:
This is also an option:
x==2 && dosomething();
dosomething()
will only be called if x==2
is evaluated to true. This is called Short-circuiting.
It is not commonly used in cases like this and you really shouldn't write code like this. I encourage this simpler approach:
if(x==2) dosomething();
You should write readable code at all times; if you are worried about file size, just create a minified version of it with help of one of the many JS compressors. (e.g Google's Closure Compiler)