I saw %
in many codes. Can you explain to me its purpose or what it does?
P.S: The %
is ignored from Google searches, so I couldn't find it on Google.
Edit: I know the operand in math 13 % 10 = 3
but what I saw is like return %foo
.
I saw %
in many codes. Can you explain to me its purpose or what it does?
P.S: The %
is ignored from Google searches, so I couldn't find it on Google.
Edit: I know the operand in math 13 % 10 = 3
but what I saw is like return %foo
.
Based on the link you provided in the comments, the %
character appears to be used in some of the V8 JavaScript engine source code to indicate a method of the C++ runtime that will be executed while parsing the JavaScript source.
For example, the line in string.js:
return %StringBuilderConcat(parts, len + 1, "");
When encountered by the parser, the StringBuilderConcat
method will be executed. You can find a list of the runtime methods available to the V8 JavaScript files in runtime.h (note, I have no experience with C++, so for all I know this has nothing to do with the StringBuilderConcat
method referenced in string.js, but I think it's the same thing):
#define RUNTIME_FUNCTION_LIST_ALWAYS_1(F) \
/* Property access */ \
F(GetProperty, 2, 1) \
F(KeyedGetProperty, 2, 1) \
/* ... */
F(StringBuilderConcat, 3, 1) \
/* ... */
As has already been stated, return %foo
would throw a SyntaxError in JavaScript.