Operator Assignment Shorthand (operator-assignment)
JavaScript provides shorthand operators that combine variable assignment and some simple mathematical operations. For example, x = x + 4
can be shortened to x += 4
. The supported shorthand forms are as follows:
Shorthand | Separate
-----------|------------
x += y | x = x + y
x -= y | x = x - y
x *= y | x = x * y
x /= y | x = x / y
x %= y | x = x % y
x <<= y | x = x << y
x >>= y | x = x >> y
x >>>= y | x = x >>> y
x &= y | x = x & y
x ^= y | x = x ^ y
x |= y | x = x | y
Rule Details
This rule enforces use of the shorthand assignment operators by requiring them where possible or prohibiting them entirely. It has two modes: always
and never
.
always
"operator-assignment": [2, "always"]
This mode enforces use of operator assignment shorthand where possible.
The following are examples of valid patterns:
x = y;
x += y;
x = y * z;
x = (x * y) * z;
x[0] /= y;
x[foo()] = x[foo()] % 2;
x = y + x; // `+` is not always commutative (e.g. x = "abc")
The following patterns are considered warnings and should be replaced by their shorthand equivalents:
x = x + y;
x = y * x;
x[0] = x[0] / y;
x.y = x.y << z;
never
"operator-assignment": [2, "never"]
This mode warns on any use of operator assignment shorthand.
The following are examples of valid patterns:
x = x + y;
x.y = x.y / a.b;
The following patterns are considered warnings and should be written out fully without the shorthand assignments:
x *= y;
x ^= (y + z) / foo();
When Not To Use It
Use of operator assignment shorthand is a stylistic choice. Leaving this rule turned off would allow developers to choose which style is more readable on a case-by-case basis.
Version
This rule was introduced in ESLint 0.10.0.