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Dhairya Shah
Dhairya Shah

Posted on • Originally published at codewithsnowbit.hashnode.dev

It's 2022, don't use the console.log(😎)

We as Javascript developers usually console.log() stuffs to test the output or just for fun. Even, I can bet that our (include me ✌️) first code was "Hello world" logged in the console.

console.log("Hello World!")
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This piece of code has been nostalgic for all fellow JS developers. But now it's 2022, let's make it a little handy and comfortable for our fingers.

In this article, I have discussed a simple and common method that has rarely been used by developers.

Let's get started

As we know, we all use to log the data to console like this...

console.log("I love js") // I love js

console.log(4 + 4) // 8

console.log(!true)  // false
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Let's work a little smarter and more efficient 😎

const log = (arg) => console.log(arg)
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Here, we have created a function with a shorter name - log relative to console.log(), you can even use a shorter name, Ummm 🤔 something like this...

const l = (arg) => console.log(arg)
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So, you might be wondering what's the benefit of writing code like this? Let's discuss the benefits.

Benefits

  • Keeps your code clean and slick
  • Improves readability
  • Relief to your fingers, don't have to write a long thing

comment more benefits if you can...

Let's test 🚗

log("Hello world") // Hello world
log(4 + 4) // 8
log(!false) // true
log(Math.PI) // 3.141592653589793
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Try yourself - fiddle

Conclusion

So, this was a quick tip to save your time and make your code look cleaner. Let me know in the comments if you will use this tip.

You can try the same thing for console. info(), console.warn(), console.error()


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Stay tuned for the next article. Stay safe and Happy Coding!

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Top comments (1)

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tzwel profile image
tzwel
const l = console.log
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should work too