I'm going through the bacon.js slide at: http://raimohanska.github.io/bacon.js-slides/1.html
In the 1st line of the 2nd block, it says:
function always(value) { return function(_) { return value } }
what does function(_)
mean?
I'm going through the bacon.js slide at: http://raimohanska.github.io/bacon.js-slides/1.html
In the 1st line of the 2nd block, it says:
function always(value) { return function(_) { return value } }
what does function(_)
mean?
In this case _
is just a function parameter - a single underscore is a convention used by some programmers to indicate "ignore this binding/parameter".
Since JavaScript doesn't do parameter-count checking the parameter could have been omitted entirely. Such a "throw-away" identifier is found more commonly in other languages, but consider a case like arr.forEach(function (_, i) {..})
where _
indicates the first parameter is not to be used.
It's an anonymous function with one argument, the name of that argument is _
.
I don't know why they bother with the argument, since the function doesn't use it.
It's the same as putting any other identifier to a list of arguments according to this document: http://mathiasbynens.be/notes/javascript-identifiers
You'll find in this doc that _ is a legal character that an identifier can start with.
There is no any meaning for this in your example, probably the author just thought that it's cooler than just ().