Came across this JS snippet, and I honestly have NO id开发者_运维问答ea of what order things are being evaluated in... Any ideas? Parentheses would be helpful...
return point[0] >= -width / 2 - allowance &&
point[0] <= width / 2 + allowance &&
point[1] >= -height / 2 - allowance &&
point[1] <= height / 2 + allowance;
https://developer.mozilla.org/en/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/Operator_Precedence
The relavant operators go in this order: unary negation, division, addition/subtraction, relational (>=, <=), logical and.
return (point[0] >= ((-width / 2) - allowance))
&& (point[0] <= ((width / 2) + allowance))
&& (point[1] >= ((-height / 2) - allowance))
&& (point[1] <= ((height / 2) + allowance))
Equivalent to:
return
(point[0] >= ((-width / 2) - allowance))
&& (point[0] <= (( width / 2) + allowance))
&& (point[1] >= ((-height / 2) - allowance))
&& (point[1] <= (( height / 2) + allowance));
check this
function bob(n){
alert(n);
return n;
}
return bob(1) >= bob(2) / bob(3) - bob(4) &&
bob(5) <= bob(6) / bob97) + bob(8) &&
bob(9) >= bob(10) / bob(11) - bob(12) &&
bob(13) <= bob(14) / bob(15) + bob(16);
Adding paratheses and some indentation should make it clearer:
return
point[0] >= (-width / 2) - allowance
&&
point[0] <= (width / 2) + allowance
&&
point[1] >= (-height / 2) - allowance
&&
point[1] <= (height / 2) + allowance;
return (point[0]) >= (-width / 2 - allowance) && (point[0] <= width / 2 + allowance) && (point[1] >= -height / 2 - allowance) && (point[1]) <= (height / 2 + allowance);
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