I’ll explain by example:
Elvis Operator (?: )
The “Elvis operator” is a shortening
of Java’s ternary operator. One
instance of where this is handy is for
returning a ‘sensible default’ value
if an expression resolves to false or
null. A simple example might look like
this:
def gender = user.male ? "male" : "female" //traditional ternary operator usage
def displayName = user.name ?: "Anonymous" //more compact Elvis operator
Safe Navigation Operator (?.)
The Safe Navigation operator is used
to avoid a NullPointerException.
Typically when you have a reference to
an object you might need to verify
that it is not null before accessing
methods or properties of the object.
To avoid this, the safe navigation
operator will simply return null
instead of throwing an exception, like
so:
def user = User.find( "admin" ) //this might be null if 'admin' does not exist
def streetName = user?.address?.street //streetName will be null if user or user.address is null - no NPE thrown
You can use the logical ‘OR’ operator in place of the Elvis operator:
For example
displayname = user.name || "Anonymous".But Javascript currently doesn’t have the other functionality. I’d recommend looking at CoffeeScript if you want an alternative syntax. It has some shorthand that is similar to what you are looking for.
For example The Existential Operator
Function shortcuts
Sexy function calling
There is also multiline comments and classes. Obviously you have to compile this to javascript or insert into the page as
<script type='text/coffeescript>'but it adds a lot of functionality 🙂 . Using<script type='text/coffeescript'>is really only intended for development and not production.