ES2015+ cheatsheet

A quick overview of new JavaScript features in ES2015, ES2016, ES2017, ES2018 and beyond.

Block scoping

Let

function fn () {
let x = 0
if (true) {
let x = 1 // only inside this `if`
}
}


Const

const a = 1

let is the new var. Constants work just like let, but can’t be reassigned. See: Let and const

Backtick strings

Interpolation

const message = `Hello ${name}`

Multiline strings

const str = `
hello
world
`

Templates and multiline strings. See: Template strings

Binary and octal literals

let bin = 0b1010010
let oct = 0o755

See: Binary and octal literals

New methods

New string methods

"hello".repeat(3)
"hello".includes("ll")
"hello".startsWith("he")
"hello".padStart(8) // "   hello"
"hello".padEnd(8) // "hello   "
"hello".padEnd(8, '!') // hello!!!
"\u1E9B\u0323".normalize("NFC")

See: New methods

Classes

class Circle extends Shape {

Constructor

constructor (radius) {
this.radius = radius
}

Methods

getArea () {
return Math.PI * 2 * this.radius
}

Calling superclass methods

expand (n) {
return super.expand(n) * Math.PI
}

Static methods

static createFromDiameter(diameter) {
return new Circle(diameter / 2)
}
}

Syntactic sugar for prototypes. See: Classes

Exponent operator

const byte = 2 ** 8
// Same as: Math.pow(2, 8)

Promises

Making promises

new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
if (ok) { resolve(result) }
else { reject(error) }
})

For asynchronous programming. See: Promises

Using promises

promise
.then((result) => { ··· })
.catch((error) => { ··· })


Using promises with finally

promise
.then((result) => { ··· })
.catch((error) => { ··· })
.finally(() => { // logic independent of success/error })

The handler is called when the promise is fulfilled or rejected.

Promise functions

Promise.all(···)
Promise.race(···)
Promise.reject(···)
Promise.resolve(···)

Async-await

async function run () {
const user = await getUser()
const tweets = await getTweets(user)
return [user, tweets]
}


async functions are another way of using functions. See: async function

Destructuring

Destructuring assignment

Arrays

const [first, last] = ['Nikola', 'Tesla']

Objects

let {title, author} = {
title: 'The Silkworm',
author: 'R. Galbraith'
}

Supports for matching arrays and objects. See: Destructuring

Default values

const scores = [22, 33]
const [math = 50, sci = 50, arts = 50] = scores
// Result:
// math === 22, sci === 33, arts === 50

Default values can be assigned while destructuring arrays or objects.

Function arguments

function greet({ name, greeting }) {
console.log(`${greeting}, ${name}!`)
}

greet({ name: 'Larry', greeting: 'Ahoy' })

Destructuring of objects and arrays can also be done in function arguments.

Default values

function greet({ name = 'Rauno' } = {}) {
console.log(`Hi ${name}!`);
}

greet() // Hi Rauno!
greet({ name: 'Larry' }) // Hi Larry!

Reassigning keys

function printCoordinates({ left: x, top: y }) {
console.log(`x: ${x}, y: ${y}`)
}

printCoordinates({ left: 25, top: 90 })

This example assigns x to the value of the left key.

Loops

for (let {title, artist} of songs) {
···
}

The assignment expressions work in loops, too.

Object destructuring

const { id, ...detail } = song;

Extract some keys individually and remaining keys in the object using rest (…) operator

Spread

Object spread

with Object spread

const options = {
...defaults,
visible: true
}

without Object spread

const options = Object.assign(
{}, defaults,
{ visible: true })

The Object spread operator lets you build new objects from other objects. See: Object spread

Array spread

with Array spread

const users = [
...admins,
...editors,
'rstacruz'
]


without Array spread

const users = admins
.concat(editors)
.concat([ 'rstacruz' ])

The spread operator lets you build new arrays in the same way. See: Spread operator

Functions

Function arguments

Default arguments

function greet (name = 'Jerry') {
return `Hello ${name}`
}

Rest arguments

function fn(x, ...y) {
// y is an Array
return x * y.length
}

Spread

fn(...[1, 2, 3])
// same as fn(1, 2, 3)

Default, rest, spread. See: Function arguments

Fat arrows

Fat arrows

setTimeout(() => {
···
})

With arguments

readFile('text.txt', (err, data) => {
...
})

Implicit return

numbers.map(n => n * 2)
// No curly braces = implicit return
// Same as: numbers.map(function (n) { return n * 2 })
numbers.map(n => ({
result: n * 2
}))
// Implicitly returning objects requires parentheses around the object

Like functions but with this preserved. See: Fat arrows

Objects

Shorthand syntax

module.exports = { hello, bye }
// Same as: module.exports = { hello: hello, bye: bye }

See: Object literal enhancements

Methods

const App = {
start () {
console.log('running')
}
}
// Same as: App = { start: function () {···} }

See: Object literal enhancements

Getters and setters

const App = {
get closed () {
return this.status === 'closed'
},
set closed (value) {
this.status = value ? 'closed' : 'open'
}
}


See: Object literal enhancements

Computed property names

let event = 'click'
let handlers = {
[`on${event}`]: true
}
// Same as: handlers = { 'onclick': true }

See: Object literal enhancements

Extract values

const fatherJS = { age: 57, name: "Brendan Eich" }
Object.values(fatherJS)
// [57, "Brendan Eich"]
Object.entries(fatherJS)
// [["age", 57], ["name", "Brendan Eich"]]


Modules

Imports

import 'helpers'
// aka: require('···')
import Express from 'express'
// aka: const Express = require('···').default || require('···')
import { indent } from 'helpers'
// aka: const indent = require('···').indent
import * as Helpers from 'helpers'
// aka: const Helpers = require('···')
import { indentSpaces as indent } from 'helpers'
// aka: const indent = require('···').indentSpaces

import is the new require(). See: Module imports

Exports

export default function () { ··· }
// aka: module.exports.default = ···
export function mymethod () { ··· }
// aka: module.exports.mymethod = ···
export const pi = 3.14159
// aka: module.exports.pi = ···

export is the new module.exports. See: Module exports

Generators

Generators

function* idMaker () {
let id = 0
while (true) { yield id++ }
}
let gen = idMaker()
gen.next().value  // → 0
gen.next().value  // → 1
gen.next().value  // → 2

It’s complicated. See: Generators

For..of iteration

for (let i of iterable) {
···
}

For iterating through generators and arrays. See: For..of iteration