Arguments
You can call JavaScript functions with fewer or more arguments than the number they expect!
Fewer Arguments
Missing argument? Parameter is undefined:
function myfunction (x, y) { console.log(x, y); } myfunction(2);
This feature can be employed to create optional parameters: check for undefined
parameters and assign them a default value.
In modern JavaScript, you can use default parameter values by assigning a value to a parameter in the function signature.
function average(x, y = x) {
return (x + y) / 2;
}
Multiple default arguments:
function average(x = 0, y = x) { return (x + y) / 2; } console.log(average(2,3)); console.log(average(2)); console.log(average());
More Arguments
If you provide a function with more arguments than it expects, it will ignore the extra ones!
function myfunction (x, y) { console.log(x, y); } myfunction(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6);
Rest Parameters/Spread Operator
We've seen the "rest parameters" in the destructuring assignment with arrays and objects. You can use the same pattern to capture a variable number of arguments:
function total(...args) { let sum = 0; for (x of args) sum += x; return sum; } console.log(total(1)); console.log(total(1, 2)); console.log(total(1, 2, 3)); console.log(total(1, 2, 3, 4));
JavaScript has a "spread operator," which looks identical to the "rest operator," but its purpose is to expand (spread out) the elements of an iterable object.
const numbers = [3, 4, 5]
const result = total(...numbers);
You can create a function that takes both named parameters and rest parameter but in that case the rest parameter must be the last parameter.
function myFunction (arg1, arg2, ...rest) { /* do something awesome with all the arguments! */ }
Arguments Object
If you are puzzled by how functions can be called with fewer/more arguments, here is an explanation. It turns out, the named parameters of a function are more like guidelines than anything else! Every function has access to an array-like object called arguments
. This object holds all of the values passed to the function.
function myfunction () { for (let i = 0; i < arguments.length; i++) { console.log(arguments[i]); } } myfunction(1, 2, 3, 4);
Suppose you declare a function with $n$ named parameters. In that case, JavaScript will assign the first $n$ elements of arguments
to those parameters.
Caution: Arrow function do no have
argumnets
object.