The
do { .. }
expression executes a block (with one or many statements in it), and the final statement completion value inside the block becomes the completion value of the do expression.
from You Don’t Know JS
It can be seen as a complex version of the ternary operator:
let a = do {
if(x > 10) {
'big';
} else {
'small';
}
};
// is equivalent to:
let a = x > 10 ? 'big' : 'small';
This example is not the best usage because it is too simple and using a ternary operator is a better option but you can have a much more complex condition in the do { ... }
expression with several if ... else
chains:
let x = 100;
let y = 20;
let a = do {
if(x > 10) {
if(y > 20) {
'big x, big y';
} else {
'big x, small y';
}
} else {
if(y > 10) {
'small x, big y';
} else {
'small x, small y';
}
}
};
One of the most useful usage of the do
expression is inside JSX. If we want to conditionally display a component we usually have to call another function which would implement the condition and return the correct value, for example:
const getColoredComponent = color => {
if(color === 'blue') { return <BlueComponent/>; }
if(color === 'red') { return <RedComponent/>; }
if(color === 'green') { return <GreenComponent/>; }
}
const Component = props =>
<div className='myComponent'>
{getColoredComponent()}
</div>
;
Using a do expression you can add logic inside JSX:
const Component = props =>
<div className='myComponent'>
{do {
if(color === 'blue') { <BlueComponent/>; }
else if(color === 'red') { <RedComponent/>; }
else if(color === 'green') { <GreenComponent/>; }
}}
</div>
;
npm install --save-dev babel-plugin-transform-do-expressions
.babelrc
(Recommended).babelrc
{
"plugins": ["transform-do-expressions"]
}
babel --plugins transform-do-expressions script.js
require("babel-core").transform("code", {
plugins: ["transform-do-expressions"]
});