Can someone explain to me: why are generator functions in ES6 marked by asterisk symbol?
For example, instead of:
The three reasons were:
Readability. A generator is quite different from a function, and the difference should be immediately visible (that is, without examining the whole implementation in search for a yield).
Generality. It should be naturally possible to write generators that do not yield, and only return directly. Moreover, commenting out part of the body (e.g. for debugging) should not silently change whether something is a generator.
Compatibility. Only strict mode reserved 'yield' as a keyword, but it was made a goal for ES6 that all new features are also available in sloppy mode (an unfortunate decision IMHO, but nevertheless). Moreover, even in strict mode there are many parsing subtleties around 'yield'; for example, consider default arguments:
function* g(a = yield(2)) { 'use strict' }
Without the *
, the parser could only decide how to parse the yield after it has seen the body of the function. That is, you would need infinite look-ahead, or back-tracking, or other hacky techniques to deal with this.
I should note that (1) and (2) are already reason enough.
(Full disclosure: I am a member of the EcmaScript committee.)
Empty generators (with no body) are not disallowed; so should unStarredFunc()
follow generator semantics or not?
For compatibility reasons:
function yield(x) { return x };
function a() {
yield (4+1);
};
this is syntactically correct but calling .next()
would result in an error whereas adding an asterisk to explicitly define a generator would cause .next().value === 5
detect that someGenerator contains yield operator at parse time
Some constructs cannot be resolved at parse time:
function someGenerator(i) {
if (glob)
return 4;
else
yield* anotherGen(i);
}
And of course its simpler to see immediately from the function*
definition that its a generator without needing to dig into its source to look for yields.