What Does Arrow Function '() => {}' Mean in JavaScript

What's the meaning of = (an arrow formed from equals & greater than) in JavaScript?

What It Is

This is an arrow function. Arrow functions are a short syntax, introduced by ECMAscript 6, that can be used similarly to the way you would use function expressions. In other words, you can often use them in place of expressions like function (foo) {...}. But they have some important differences. For example, they do not bind their own values of this (see below for discussion).

Arrow functions are part of the ECMAscript 6 specification. They are not yet supported in all browsers, but they are partially or fully supported in Node v. 4.0+ and in most modern browsers in use as of 2018. (I’ve included a partial list of supporting browsers below).

You can read more in the Mozilla documentation on arrow functions.

From the Mozilla documentation:

An arrow function expression (also known as fat arrow function) has a shorter syntax compared to function expressions and lexically binds the this value (does not bind its own this, arguments, super, or new.target). Arrow functions are always anonymous. These function expressions are best suited for non-method functions and they can not be used as constructors.

A Note on How this Works in Arrow Functions

One of the most handy features of an arrow function is buried in the text above:

An arrow function... lexically binds the this value (does not bind its own this...)

What this means in simpler terms is that the arrow function retains the this value from its context and does not have its own this. A traditional function may bind its own this value, depending on how it is defined and called. This can require lots of gymnastics like self = this;, etc., to access or manipulate this from one function inside another function. For more info on this topic, see the explanation and examples in the Mozilla documentation.

Example Code

Example (also from the docs):

var a = [
"We're up all night 'til the sun",
"We're up all night to get some",
"We're up all night for good fun",
"We're up all night to get lucky"
];

// These two assignments are equivalent:

// Old-school:
var a2 = a.map(function(s){ return s.length });

// ECMAscript 6 using arrow functions
var a3 = a.map( s => s.length );

// both a2 and a3 will be equal to [31, 30, 31, 31]


Notes on Compatibility

You can use arrow functions in Node, but browser support is spotty.

Browser support for this functionality has improved quite a bit, but it still is not widespread enough for most browser-based usages. As of December 12, 2017, it is supported in current versions of:

  • Chrome (v. 45+)
  • Firefox (v. 22+)
  • Edge (v. 12+)
  • Opera (v. 32+)
  • Android Browser (v. 47+)
  • Opera Mobile (v. 33+)
  • Chrome for Android (v. 47+)
  • Firefox for Android (v. 44+)
  • Safari (v. 10+)
  • iOS Safari (v. 10.2+)
  • Samsung Internet (v. 5+)
  • Baidu Browser (v. 7.12+)

Not supported in:

  • IE (through v. 11)
  • Opera Mini (through v. 8.0)
  • Blackberry Browser (through v. 10)
  • IE Mobile (through v. 11)
  • UC Browser for Android (through v. 11.4)
  • QQ (through v. 1.2)

You can find more (and more current) information at CanIUse.com (no affiliation).

What does = mean in JavaScript?

It's a new feature that introduced in ES6 and is called arrow function. The left part denotes the input of a function and the right part the output of that function.

So in your case

s.split('')

splits the input on empty spaces and for each element of the resulted array you apply the following function:

(x,index) => x.toUpperCase()+Array(index+1).join(x.toLowerCase())

The left part is the random element, x of the array (s.split('')) and it's corresponding index. The second part applies a transformation to this input.

What does arrow function '() = {}' mean in Javascript?

This is the new arrow syntax of ES6. It differs by the treatment of this: function gets a this according to the calling context (traditional semantics), but the arrow functions keep the this of the context of definition.

see http://tc39wiki.calculist.org/es6/arrow-functions/

What does this symbol mean in JavaScript?

See the documentation on MDN about expressions and operators and statements.

Basic keywords and general expressions

this keyword:

  • How does the "this" keyword work, and when should it be used?

var x = function() vs. function x()  —  Function declaration syntax

  • var functionName = function() {} vs function functionName() {}

(function(){})()  —  IIFE (Immediately Invoked Function Expression)

  • What is the purpose?, How is it called?
  • Why does (function(){…})(); work but function(){…}(); doesn't?
  • (function(){…})(); vs (function(){…}());
  • shorter alternatives:
    • !function(){…}(); - What does the exclamation mark do before the function?
    • +function(){…}(); - JavaScript plus sign in front of function expression
    • !function(){ }() vs (function(){ })(), ! vs leading semicolon
  • (function(window, undefined){…}(window));

someFunction()()  —  Functions which return other functions

  • Two sets of parentheses after function call

=>  —  Equal sign, greater than: arrow function expression syntax

  • What's the meaning of "=>" (an arrow formed from equals & greater than) in JavaScript?

|>  —  Pipe, greater than: Pipeline operator

  • What does the "|>" operator do in JavaScript?

function*, yield, yield*  —  Star after function or yield: generator functions

  • What is "function*" in JavaScript?
  • What's the yield keyword in JavaScript?
  • Delegated yield (yield star, yield *) in generator functions

[], [ value ], Array()  —  Square brackets: array notation

  • What’s the difference between "Array()" and "[]" while declaring a JavaScript array?
  • What is array literal notation in javascript and when should you use it?

If the square brackets appear on the left side of an assignment ([a] = ...), or inside a function's parameters, it's a destructuring assignment.

{}, { key: value }, { [key]: value }  —  Curly brackets: object literal syntax (not to be confused with blocks)

  • What do curly braces in JavaScript mean?
  • Javascript object literal: what exactly is {a, b, c}?
  • What do square brackets around a property name in an object literal mean?
  • How does this object method definition work without the "function" keyword? (ES2015 Method definitions)

If the curly brackets appear on the left side of an assignment ({ a } = ...) or inside a function's parameters, it's a destructuring assignment.

`${}`  —  Backticks, dollar sign with curly brackets: template literals

  • What does this `…${…}…` code from the node docs mean?
  • Usage of the backtick character (`) in JavaScript?
  • What is the purpose of template literals (backticks) following a function in ES6?

//  —  Slashes: regular expression literals

  • Meaning of javascript text between two slashes

$  —  Dollar sign in regex replace patterns: $$, $&, $`, $', $n

  • JavaScript replace() method dollar signs

()  —  Parentheses: grouping operator

  • MDN: Grouping operator


Property-related expressions

obj.prop, obj[prop], obj["prop"]  —  Square brackets or dot: property accessors

  • JavaScript property access: dot notation vs. brackets?

?., ?.[], ?.()  —  Question mark, dot: optional chaining operator

  • Question mark after parameter
  • Null-safe property access (and conditional assignment) in ES6/2015
  • Optional Chaining in JavaScript
  • Is there a null-coalescing (Elvis) operator or safe navigation operator in javascript?
  • Is there a "null coalescing" operator in JavaScript?

::  —  Double colon: bind operator

  • JavaScript double colon (bind operator)

new operator

  • What is the 'new' keyword in JavaScript?
  • What is "new.target"?

...iter  —  Three dots: spread syntax; rest parameters

  • (...rest) => {}  —  What is the meaning of “…args” (three dots) in a function definition?
  • fn(...args)  —  What is the meaning of “foo(…arg)” (three dots in a function call)?
  • [...iter]  —  javascript es6 array feature […data, 0] “spread operator”
  • {...props}  —  Javascript Property with three dots (…), What does the '…rest' stand for in this object destructuring?


Increment and decrement

++, --  —  Double plus or minus: pre- / post-increment / -decrement operators

  • ++someVariable vs someVariable++ in Javascript


Unary and binary (arithmetic, logical, bitwise) operators

delete operator

  • What is the purpose of the delete operator in Javascript?

void operator

  • What does `void 0` mean?

+, -  —  Plus and minus: addition or concatenation, and subtraction operators; unary sign operators

  • What does = +_ mean in JavaScript, Single plus operator in javascript
  • What's the significant use of unary plus and minus operators?
  • Why is [1,2] + [3,4] = "1,23,4" in JavaScript?
  • Why does JavaScript handle the plus and minus operators between strings and numbers differently?

|, &, ^, ~  —  Single pipe, ampersand, circumflex, tilde: bitwise OR, AND, XOR, & NOT operators

  • What do these JavaScript bitwise operators do?
  • How to: The ~ operator?
  • Is there a & logical operator in Javascript
  • What does the "|" (single pipe) do in JavaScript?
  • What does the operator |= do in JavaScript?
  • What does the ^ (caret) symbol do in JavaScript?
  • Using bitwise OR 0 to floor a number, How does x|0 floor the number in JavaScript?
  • Why does ~1 equal -2?
  • What does ~~ ("double tilde") do in Javascript?
  • How does !!~ (not not tilde/bang bang tilde) alter the result of a 'contains/included' Array method call? (also here and here)

%  —  Percent sign: remainder operator

  • What does % do in JavaScript?

&&, ||, !  —  Double ampersand, double pipe, exclamation point: logical operators

  • Logical operators in JavaScript — how do you use them?
  • Logical operator || in javascript, 0 stands for Boolean false?
  • What does "var FOO = FOO || {}" (assign a variable or an empty object to that variable) mean in Javascript?, JavaScript OR (||) variable assignment explanation, What does the construct x = x || y mean?
  • Javascript AND operator within assignment
  • What is "x && foo()"? (also here and here)
  • What is the !! (not not) operator in JavaScript?
  • What is an exclamation point in JavaScript?

??  —  Double question mark: nullish-coalescing operator

  • How is the nullish coalescing operator (??) different from the logical OR operator (||) in ECMAScript?
  • Is there a null-coalescing (Elvis) operator or safe navigation operator in javascript?
  • Is there a "null coalescing" operator in JavaScript?

**  —  Double star: power operator (exponentiation)

  • x ** 2 is equivalent to Math.pow(x, 2)
  • Is the double asterisk ** a valid JavaScript operator?
  • MDN documentation


Equality operators

==, ===  —  Equal signs: equality operators

  • Which equals operator (== vs ===) should be used in JavaScript comparisons?
  • How does JS type coercion work?
  • In Javascript, <int-value> == "<int-value>" evaluates to true. Why is it so?
  • [] == ![] evaluates to true
  • Why does "undefined equals false" return false?
  • Why does !new Boolean(false) equals false in JavaScript?
  • Javascript 0 == '0'. Explain this example
  • Why false == "false" is false?

!=, !==  —  Exclamation point and equal signs: inequality operators

  • != vs. !==
  • What is the difference between != and !== operators in JavaScript?


Bit shift operators

<<, >>, >>>  —  Two or three angle brackets: bit shift operators

  • What do these JavaScript bitwise operators do?
  • Double more-than symbol in JavaScript
  • What is the JavaScript >>> operator and how do you use it?


Conditional operator

?:…  —  Question mark and colon: conditional (ternary) operator

  • Question mark and colon in JavaScript
  • Operator precedence with JavaScript's ternary operator
  • How do you use the ? : (conditional) operator in JavaScript?


Assignment operators

=  —  Equal sign: assignment operator

  • What is the difference between the `=` and `==` operators and what is `===`? (Single, double, and triple equals)

This symbol is also used for default parameters or default values in a destructuring assignment:

  • what does (state = {}) => state means
  • What does ({"key": "value"} = {}) syntax mean inside a JavaScript function

%=  —  Percent equals: remainder assignment

  • Having Confusion with Modulo operator

+=  —  Plus equals: addition assignment operator

  • How does += (plus equal) work?

&&=, ||=, ??=  —  Double ampersand, pipe, or question mark, followed by equal sign: logical assignments

  • What purpose do &&=, ||= and ??= serve?
  • Replace a value if null or undefined in JavaScript
  • Set a variable if undefined
  • Ruby’s ||= (or equals) in JavaScript?
  • Original proposal
  • Specification

<<=, >>=, >>>=, &=, ^=, |= — Double less than, double greater than, triple greater than, ampersand, caret, or pipe followed by equal sign: bitwise assignments

  • What do these JavaScript bitwise operators do?

Destructuring

  • of function parameters: Where can I get info on the object parameter syntax for JavaScript functions?
  • of arrays: Multiple assignment in JavaScript? What does `[ a, b, c ] = [ 1, 2, 3 ]` mean?
  • of objects/imports: Javascript object bracket notation ({ Navigation } =) on left side of assign


Comma operator

,  —  Comma operator (not to be confused with the comma used in variable declarations)

  • What does the comma operator do in JavaScript?
  • Comma operator returns first value instead of second in argument list?
  • When is the comma operator useful?


Control flow

{}  — Curly brackets: blocks (not to be confused with object literal syntax)

  • JavaScript curly braces with no function or json

Declarations

var, let, const  —  Declaring variables

  • What is the difference between "let" and "var"?
  • Are there constants in JavaScript?
  • What is the temporal dead zone?
  • var a, b;  —  Comma used in variable declarations (not to be confused with the comma operator): JavaScript variable definition: Commas vs. Semicolons


Label

label:  —  Colon: labels

  • What does the JavaScript syntax foo: mean?
  • What does ':' (colon) do in JavaScript?


Other

123n  —  n after integer: BigInt

  • What does character 'n' after numeric literal mean in JavaScript?

#  —  Hash (number sign): Private methods or private fields

  • What does the # symbol do in JavaScript?

_  —  Underscore: separator in numeric literals

  • Javascript numeric separators?
  • Is there a Javascript equivalent to the Ruby syntax using underscores (e.g. 10_000 = 10000) to make larger integers human readable?

What's the meaning of = in TypeScript? (Fat Arrow)

Perhaps you are confusing type information with a function declaration. If you compile the following:

var MakePoint: () => {x: number; y: number;};

you will see that it produces:

var MakePoint;

In TypeScript, everything that comes after the : but before an = (assignment) is the type information. So your example is saying that the type of MakePoint is a function that takes 0 arguments and returns an object with two properties, x and y, both numbers. It is not assigning a function to that variable. In contrast, compiling:

var MakePoint = () => 1;

produces:

var MakePoint = function () { return 1; };

Note that in this case, the => fat arrow comes after the assignment operator.



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