58 lines
1.1 KiB
Plaintext

Extra semicolons (``++;++``) are usually introduced by mistake, for example because:
* It was meant to be replaced by an actual statement, but this was forgotten.
* There was a typo which lead the semicolon to be doubled, i.e. ``++;;++``.
* There was a misunderstanding about where semicolons are required or useful.
== Noncompliant Code Example
[source,javascript]
----
var x = 1;; // Noncompliant
function foo() {
}; // Noncompliant
----
== Compliant Solution
[source,javascript]
----
var x = 1;
function foo() {
}
----
== Exceptions
This rule does not apply when the semicolon is after a line break and before ``++(++`` or ``++[++`` as it is often used in semicolon-less style.
----
const hello = 'Hello'
const world = 'World!'
const helloWorld = hello + ' ' + world
;[...helloWorld].forEach(c => console.log(c))
----
----
const a = 1
const b = 2 * a
;(a + b).toString()
----
ifdef::env-github,rspecator-view[]
'''
== Implementation Specification
(visible only on this page)
include::message.adoc[]
'''
== Comments And Links
(visible only on this page)
include::../comments-and-links.adoc[]
endif::env-github,rspecator-view[]