void operator
The void
operator evaluates the given
expression
and then returns undefined
.
Try it
Syntax
void expression
Description
This operator allows evaluating expressions that produce a value into places where an
expression that evaluates to undefined
is desired.
The void
operator is often used merely to obtain the
undefined
primitive value, usually using void(0)
(which is
equivalent to void 0
). In these cases, the global variable
undefined
can be used.
It should be noted that the precedence
of the void
operator should be taken into account and that
parentheses can help clarify the resolution of the expression following the
void
operator:
void 2 === "2"; // (void 2) === '2', returns false
void (2 === "2"); // void (2 === '2'), returns undefined
Examples
Immediately Invoked Function Expressions
When using an immediately-invoked function expression, the function
keyword cannot be at the immediate start of the statement, because that would be parsed as a function declaration, and would generate a syntax error when the parentheses representing invocation is reached — if the function is unnamed, it would immediately be a syntax error if the function is parsed as a declaration.
function iife() {
console.log("Executed!");
}(); // SyntaxError: Unexpected token ')'
function () {
console.log("Executed!");
}(); // SyntaxError: Function statements require a function name
In order for the function to be parsed as an expression, the function
keyword has to appear at a position that only accepts expressions, not statements. This can be achieved by prefixing the keyword with a unary operator, which only accepts expressions as operands. Function invocation has higher precedence than unary operators, so it will be executed first. Its return value (which is almost always undefined
) will be passed to the unary operator and then immediately discarded.
Of all the unary operators, void
offers the best semantic, because it clearly signals that the return value of the function invocation should be discarded.
void function () {
console.log("Executed!");
}();
// Logs "Executed!"
This is a bit longer than wrapping the function expression in parentheses, which has the same effect of forcing the function
keyword to be parsed as the start of an expression instead of a statement.
(function () {
console.log("Executed!");
})();
JavaScript URIs
When a browser follows a javascript:
URI, it evaluates the code in the URI
and then replaces the contents of the page with the returned value, unless the returned
value is undefined
. The void
operator can be used to return
undefined
. For example:
<a href="javascript:void(0);">Click here to do nothing</a>
<a href="javascript:void(document.body.style.backgroundColor='green');">
Click here for green background
</a>
Note: javascript:
pseudo protocol is discouraged over
other alternatives, such as unobtrusive event handlers.
Non-leaking Arrow Functions
Arrow functions introduce a short-hand braceless syntax that returns an expression.
This can cause unintended side effects if the expression is a function call where the returned value changes from undefined
to some other value.
For example, if doSomething()
returns false
in the code below, the checkbox will no longer be marked as checked or unchecked when the checkbox is clicked (returning false
from the handler disables the default action).
checkbox.onclick = () => doSomething();
This is unlikely to be desired behaviour!
To be safe, when the return value of a function is not intended to be used, it can be passed to the void
operator to ensure that (for example) changing APIs do not cause arrow functions' behaviors to change.
checkbox.onclick = () => void doSomething();
Specifications
Specification |
---|
ECMAScript Language Specification # sec-void-operator |
Browser compatibility
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