Arrow functions were introduced in ES6.
Arrow functions allow us to write shorter function syntax:
Before:
return "Hello World!";
}
With Arrow Function:
return "Hello World!";
}
It gets shorter! If the function has only one statement, and the statement returns a value, you can remove the brackets and the return
keyword:
Arrow Functions Return Value by Default:
Note: This works only if the function has only one statement.
If you have parameters, you pass them inside the parentheses:
Arrow Function With Parameters:
In fact, if you have only one parameter, you can skip the parentheses as well:
Arrow Function Without Parentheses:
What About this
?
The handling of this
is also different in arrow functions compared to regular functions.
In short, with arrow functions there are no binding of this
.
In regular functions the this
keyword represented the object that called the function, which could be the window, the document, a button or whatever.
With arrow functions the this
keyword always represents the object that defined the arrow function.
Let us take a look at two examples to understand the difference.
Both examples call a method twice, first when the page loads, and once again when the user clicks a button.
The first example uses a regular function, and the second example uses an arrow function.
The result shows that the first example returns two different objects (window and button), and the second example returns the window object twice, because the window object is the "owner" of the function.
Example
With a regular functionthis
represents the object that calls the function:
hello = function() {
document.getElementById("demo").innerHTML += this;
}
// The window object calls the function:
window.addEventListener("load", hello);
// A button object calls the function:
document.getElementById("btn").addEventListener("click", hello);
Example
With an arrow functionthis
represents the owner of the function:
hello = () => {
document.getElementById("demo").innerHTML += this;
}
// The window object calls the function:
window.addEventListener("load", hello);
// A button object calls the function:
document.getElementById("btn").addEventListener("click", hello);
Remember these differences when you are working with functions. Sometimes the behavior of regular functions is what you want, if not, use arrow functions.
Browser Support
The following table defines the first browser versions with full support for Arrow Functions in JavaScript:
Chrome 45 | Edge 12 | Firefox 22 | Safari 10 | Opera 32 |
Sep, 2015 | Jul, 2015 | May, 2013 | Sep, 2016 | Sep, 2015 |
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