const
const is a very welcomed addition offered by ES6 / TypeScript. It allows you to be immutable with variables. This is good from a documentation as well as a runtime perspective. To use const just replace var with const:
const foo = 123;The syntax is much better (IMHO) than other languages that force the user to type something like
let constant fooi.e. a variable + behavior specifier.
const is a good practice for both readability and maintainability and avoids using magic literals e.g.
// Low readability
if (x > 10) {
}
// Better!
const maxRows = 10;
if (x > maxRows) {
}const declarations must be initialized
The following is a compiler error:
const foo; // ERROR: const declarations must be initializedLeft hand side of assignment cannot be a constant
Constants are immutable after creation, so if you try to assign them to a new value it is a compiler error:
Block Scoped
A const is block scoped like we saw with let:
Deep immutability
A const works with object literals as well, as far as protecting the variable reference is concerned:
However, it still allows sub properties of objects to be mutated, as shown below:
Prefer const
Always use const, unless you plan to either lazily initialization of a variable, or do a reassignment (use let for those cases).
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