Optional chaining is currently not supported in Node.js version 13 and below. It will be supported from Node.js version 14 and most of the browsers as it is moved to Stage 4. Currently, few platforms are supporting it. You can find the list of platforms supporting optional chaining in the given link. You can enable optional using --harmony flag.
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Optional chaining is currently not supported in Node.js version 13 and below. It will be supported from Node.js version 14 and most of the browsers as it is moved to Stage 4. Currently, few platforms are supporting it. You can find the list of platforms supporting optional chaining in the given link. You can enable optional using --harmony flag.
The spec for the optional chaining feature was just promoted to Stage 4 (Finished) on December 22, 2019. Node 12 came out before the spec was final - and so did Node 13, for that matter.
According to node.green, optional chaining will be supported starting with Node 14, but will still require the --harmony flag. (This seems to conflict with Node's description of the --harmony flag - V8's shipping features aren't supposed to require the flag - so I'm not sure what to make of that.) Still, whether it needs a flag or not, I wouldn't expect to see the feature until the Node 14 release around April 2020.
If you want to play with optional chaining today, your best bet is to use TypeScript (which added optional chaining in version 3.7) or a preprocessor like Babel.
Hi everyone!
I love optional chaining, i really do, but there are some cases where using this syntax damages the readability of the code. One of those cases is the following
function optionalFunction(){
console.log("works");
}
// optionalFunction = undefined;
optionalFunction?.(); While i understand this approach, i find it optionalFunction?.() harder to read as opposed to this
function optionalFunction(){
console.log("works");
}
// optionalFunction = undefined;
if(optionalFunction != undefined){
optionalFunction();
} I think i'd rather have a more readable and stronger check than ES6 magic when checking if an optional function is defined.
I believe that optional chaining fixes the problem of checking if a property of an object exists, and if exists, then get the value or keep going deeper in the object structure. But this syntax just looks weird for calling functions, it looks a lot like those "one line cleverness" code that sometimes people encounter.
What are your thoughts about this?
Let's say you define variable like below
const variable = { value: 'test' };
then you want to access variable?.value it equals variable === null || variable === undefined ? undefined : variable.value.
Same with array.
Check typescript playground and see js output https://www.typescriptlang.org/play?#code/MYewdgzgLgBAhgJwXAnjAvDA2gXQNwBQBiyKA-AHRYCsADDkA
Basically, the ? in that context means optional chaining.
How it works is, for example, if you define an object like below, and you want to try and access the views property, it will throw an error.
const obj = { website: "stackoverflow.com", };
console.log(obj.views.toFixed(0)); // Error!
This is because you are trying to access a method off of undefined, which doesn't have anything.
To avoid this error, we can use optional chaining, like below.
const obj = { website: "stackoverflow.com", };
console.log(obj?.views?.toFixed(0)); // undefined
Optional chaining tells JavaScript to complete the method/read the key, but if it doesn't exist, instead of throwing an error, just return undefined.
It also works with arrays; the same way! If, say, index 78 doesn't exist, instead of throwing an error, it will just return undefined.
const arr = [1, 2, 3];
console.log(arr?.[78]?.toString());
You need to put a . after the ? to use optional chaining:
myArray.filter(x => x.testKey === myTestKey)?.[0]
Playground link
Using just the ? alone makes the compiler think you're trying to use the conditional operator (and then it throws an error since it doesn't see a : later)
Optional chaining isn't just a TypeScript thing - it is a finished proposal in plain JavaScript too.
It can be used with bracket notation like above, but it can also be used with dot notation property access:
const obj = {
prop2: {
nested2: 'val2'
}
};
console.log(
obj.prop1?.nested1,
obj.prop2?.nested2
);
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And with function calls:
const obj = {
fn2: () => console.log('fn2 running')
};
obj.fn1?.();
obj.fn2?.();
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Just found it after a little searching on the what's new page on official documentation
The right way to do it with array is to add . after ?
so it'll be like
myArray.filter(x => x.testKey === myTestKey)?.[0] // in case of object
x?.() // in case of function
I'll like to throw some more light on what exactly happens with my above question case.
myArray.filter(x => x.testKey === myTestKey)?[0]
Transpiles to
const result = myArray.filter(x => x.testKey === myTestKey) ? [0] : ;
Due to which it throws the error since there's something missing after : and you probably don't want your code to be transpilled to this.
Thanks to Certain Performance's answer I learned new things about typescript especially the tool https://www.typescriptlang.org/play/index.html .