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Trying to better understand arrow functions and came up with the following script.  Other than being longer and renaming this as _this and arguments as _arguments, is the following identical to an arrow function?  Thanks

return (function(_this, _arguments) {
    return function() {
        /* bla bla bla*/
    };
})(this, arguments);

https://jsbin.com/fazujup/1/edit?html,js,output

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
    <head>
        <meta charset="utf-8">
        <title>Closure</title>
    </head>
    <body>
        <script type="text/javascript">
            const test = {
                name: 'test object',
                createAnonFunction: function() {
                    return function() {
                        console.log('createAnonFunction this.name', this.name);
                        console.log('createAnonFunction arguments', arguments);
                    };
                },

                createArrowFunction: function() {
                    return () => {
                        console.log('createArrowFunction this.name', this.name);
                        console.log('createArrowFunction arguments', arguments);
                    };
                },

                createClosureFunction: function() {
                    return (function(_this, _arguments) {
                        return function() {
                            console.log('createClosureFunction this.name', this.name);
                            console.log('createClosureFunction arguments', arguments);
                            console.log('createClosureFunction _this.name', _this.name);
                            console.log('createClosureFunction _arguments', _arguments);
                        };
                    })(this, arguments);
                },

                createArrowFunctionSingleExp: function(a, b) {
                    // if the function body is a single expression, you can leave off the brackets and put it inline. 
                    console.log('createArrowFunctionSingleExp this, a, b', this, a, b);
                    return (a, b) => a + b;
                },

                createArrowFunctionSingleArg: function(array) {
                    //if there is only a single argument, you can even leave off the parenthesis around the argument
                    console.log('createArrowFunctionSingleArg this, array', this, array);
                    return array => array[0];
                },

                createArrowFunctionSingleExpObj: function(name, description) {
                    //To indicate that instead you want a single expression that happens to be an object, you wrap the object with parentheses
                    // ERROR =>  return (name, description) => {name: name, description: description};
                    console.log('createArrowFunctionSingleExpObj this', this);
                    return (name, description) => ({name: name, description: description});
                }

            };

            const anon = test.createAnonFunction('hello', 'world');
            const arrow = test.createArrowFunction('hello', 'world');
            const closure = test.createClosureFunction('hello', 'world');

            const arrowSingleExp = test.createArrowFunctionSingleExp('hello', 'world');
            const arrowSingleArg = test.createArrowFunctionSingleArg('hello', 'world');
            const arrowSingleExpObj = test.createArrowFunctionSingleExpObj('hello', 'world');
            
            anon();
            arrow();
            closure();
            console.log('arrowSingleExp', arrowSingleExp(4,5));
            console.log('arrowSingleArg', arrowSingleArg(['zero','one']));
            console.log('arrowSingleExpObj', arrowSingleExpObj('theName', 'theDescription'));
        </script>
    </body>
</html>

 

6 hours ago, NotionCommotion said:

Other than being longer and renaming this as _this and arguments as _arguments, is the following identical to an arrow function?

More or less for most use cases, as far as I understand them.  Arrow functions do not create their own this and arguments variables so they will inherit those of the parent context.  This is usually what a person wants to happen anyway so it makes them more convenient to use and their syntax is shorter.

There are a couple other things they handle differently according to MDN. new.target and super are also not defined, neither of which are likely to be used all that often imo. I didn't even know new.target was a thing until I read that page.  Not having their own this property makes them not useful in some situations, and apparently they can't be used as a generator using yield for some reason.

 

Edited by kicken
This thread is more than a year old. Please don't revive it unless you have something important to add.

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