A mostly reasonable approach to JavaScript
Note: this guide assumes you are using Babel, and requires that you use babel-preset-airbnb or the equivalent. It also assumes you are installing shims/polyfills in your app, with airbnb-browser-shims or the equivalent.
This guide is available in other languages too. See Translation
Other Style Guides
- Types
- References
- Objects
- Arrays
- Destructuring
- Strings
- Functions
- Arrow Functions
- Classes & Constructors
- Modules
- Iterators and Generators
- Properties
- Variables
- Hoisting
- Comparison Operators & Equality
- Blocks
- Control Statements
- Comments
- Whitespace
- Commas
- Semicolons
- Type Casting & Coercion
- Naming Conventions
- Accessors
- Events
- jQuery
- ECMAScript 5 Compatibility
- ECMAScript 6+ (ES 2015+) Styles
- Standard Library
- Testing
- Performance
- Resources
- In the Wild
- Translation
- The JavaScript Style Guide Guide
- Chat With Us About JavaScript
- Contributors
- License
- Amendments
-
1.1 Primitives: When you access a primitive type you work directly on its value.
stringnumberbooleannullundefinedsymbolbigint
const foo = 1; let bar = foo; bar = 9; console.log(foo, bar); // => 1, 9
- Symbols and BigInts cannot be faithfully polyfilled, so they should not be used when targeting browsers/environments that don’t support them natively.
-
1.2 Complex: When you access a complex type you work on a reference to its value.
objectarrayfunction
const foo = [1, 2]; const bar = foo; bar[0] = 9; console.log(foo[0], bar[0]); // => 9, 9
-
2.1 Use
constfor all of your references; avoid usingvar. eslint:prefer-const,no-const-assignWhy? This ensures that you can’t reassign your references, which can lead to bugs and difficult to comprehend code.
// bad var a = 1; var b = 2; // good const a = 1; const b = 2;
-
2.2 If you must reassign references, use
letinstead ofvar. eslint:no-varWhy?
letis block-scoped rather than function-scoped likevar.// bad var count = 1; if (true) { count += 1; } // good, use the let. let count = 1; if (true) { count += 1; }
-
2.3 Note that both
letandconstare block-scoped, whereasvaris function-scoped.// const and let only exist in the blocks they are defined in. { let a = 1; const b = 1; var c = 1; } console.log(a); // ReferenceError console.log(b); // ReferenceError console.log(c); // Prints 1
In the above code, you can see that referencing
aandbwill produce a ReferenceError, whileccontains the number. This is becauseaandbare block scoped, whilecis scoped to the containing function.
-
3.1 Use the literal syntax for object creation. eslint:
no-new-object// bad const item = new Object(); // good const item = {};
-
3.2 Use computed property names when creating objects with dynamic property names.
Why? They allow you to define all the properties of an object in one place.
function getKey(k) { return `a key named ${k}`; } // bad const obj = { id: 5, name: 'San Francisco', }; obj[getKey('enabled')] = true; // good const obj = { id: 5, name: 'San Francisco', [getKey('enabled')]: true, };
-
3.3 Use object method shorthand. eslint:
object-shorthand// bad const atom = { value: 1, addValue: function (value) { return atom.value + value; }, }; // good const atom = { value: 1, addValue(value) { return atom.value + value; }, };















