The optional chaining operator returns the value of an object property when the object is available and undefined
otherwise. .?
is similar to the standard .
chaining operator, with an added check if the object is defined.
It enables you to write concise and safe chains of connected objects when some of those objects can be null
or undefined
. Before the introduction of optional chaining in ES2020, the &&
operator was often used to check if an object is available (obj && obj.value
).
You can simplify existing checks to use the optional chaining pattern, for example:
- Change
x && x.a
tox?.a
- Change
x != null && x.a
tox?.a
- Change
x !== null && x !== undefined && x.a
tox?.a
- Change
x && x.a && x.a.b && x.a.b.c && x.a.b.c.d
tox?.a?.b?.c?.d
One thing to be aware of is that this refactoring replaces falsy checks with nullish checks. For example, when a && a.b
is replaced with a?.b
, it changes the execution for certain types, e.g. the empty string ""
is falsy but not nullish.
However, in many cases these semantic changes will lead actually to more correct behavior. For example, text && text.length
will return the empty string, but not its length, whereas text?.length
will return 0
for the empty string.
Learn More: Optional Chaining (MDN), Nullish (MDN), Truthy (MDN), Falsy (MDN)
P42 now supports converting many of the above checks into the optional chaining pattern. Try it out in the P42 VS Code Extension!
Top comments (1)
Optional chaining coming to JavaScript is so nice! Thanks for the refactoring tips.