Why do results vary based on curly brace placement?
It's because javascript most often puts ";" at the end of each line, so basicly when you have return { in same line, javascript engine see that there will be something more, and when its in new line it thinks you forgot to put ";", and puts it for you.
I personally prefer the Allman Style for readability (vs K&R style).
Instead of…
function test() {
return {
javascript : "fantastic"
};
}
I like…
function test()
{
var obj =
{
javascript : "fantastic"
};
return obj;
}
But this is a work-around. I can live with it though.
That's one of the pitfalls of JavaScript: automatic semicolon insertion. Lines that do not end with a semicolon, but could be the end of a statement, are automatically terminated, so your first example looks effectively like this:
function test()
{
return; // <- notice the inserted semicolon
{
javascript: "fantastic"
};
}
See also Douglas Crockford's JS style guide, which mentions semicolon insertion.
In your second example you return an object (built by the curly braces) with the property javascript
and its value of "fantastic"
, effectively the same as this:
function test() {
var myObject = new Object();
myObject.javascript = "fantastic";
return myObject;
}
Javascript doesn't require semicolons at the end of statements, but the drawback is that it has to guess where the semicolons are. Most of the time this is not a problem, but sometimes it invents a semicolon where you didn't intend one.
If you format the code like this:
function getAnswer() {
var answer = 42;
return
answer;
}
Then it is interpreted like this:
function getAnswer() {
var answer = 42;
return;
answer;
}
The return statement takes its parameterless form, and the argument becomes a statement of its own.
The same happens to your code. The function is interpreted as:
function test()
{
return;
{
javascript : "fantastic"
};
}