1.1 KiB
Error!
Try it:
let user = {
name: "John",
go: function() { alert(this.name) }
}
(user.go)() // error!
The error message in most browsers does not give understanding what went wrong.
The error appears because a semicolon is missing after user = {...}
.
JavaScript does not assume a semicolon before a bracket (user.go)()
, so it reads the code like:
let user = { go:... }(user.go)()
Then we can also see that such a joint expression is syntactically a call of the object { go: ... }
as a function with the argument (user.go)
. And that also happens on the same line with let user
, so the user
object has not yet even been defined, hence the error.
If we insert the semicolon, all is fine:
let user = {
name: "John",
go: function() { alert(this.name) }
}*!*;*/!*
(user.go)() // John
Please note that brackets around (user.go)
do nothing here. Usually they setup the order of operations, but here the dot .
works first anyway, so there's no effect. Only the semicolon thing matters.