DEV Community

Cover image for 20 JavaScript Tricks Every Developer Must Know πŸš€
Jagroop Singh
Jagroop Singh

Posted on

20 JavaScript Tricks Every Developer Must Know πŸš€

JavaScript is a powerful, flexible language, and knowing a few cool tricks can make your code cleaner, faster, and more efficient. Below are 20 practical JavaScript tips and tricks that you can use in real-world applications to enhance your development process.


1. Destructure and Rename in One Step

You can rename variables during object destructuring, which is helpful when there are naming conflicts.

const user = { name: 'Alice', age: 25 };
const { name: userName, age: userAge } = user;
console.log(userName); // Alice
console.log(userAge);  // 25
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

2. Optional Chaining with Function Calls

Optional chaining can be used with functions, ensuring the function exists before it’s called.

const user = {
  getName: () => 'Alice',
};
console.log(user.getName?.());   // Alice
console.log(user.getAge?.());    // undefined
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

3. Use ||= Operator for Default Assignment

The logical OR assignment (||=) assigns a value only if the variable is null or undefined or falsey value like 0.

let count;
count ||= 10;
console.log(count); // 10
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

4. Convert NodeList to Array Using Spread Operator

The spread operator provides a quick way to convert a NodeList to an array.

const divs = document.querySelectorAll('div');
const divArray = [...divs];
console.log(Array.isArray(divArray)); // true
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

5. Array/Object Destructuring with Default Values

Assign default values during destructuring to avoid undefined when keys are missing.

const user = { name: 'Alice' };
const { name, age = 25 } = user;
console.log(age); // 25
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

6. Remove Falsy Values from an Array

Use filter() to remove falsy values (like 0, null, undefined, false) from an array.

const arr = [0, 'hello', null, 42, false, 'world'];
const filtered = arr.filter(Boolean);
console.log(filtered); // ["hello", 42, "world"]
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

7. Sorting Arrays of Objects by Property

Easily sort an array of objects by a specific property.

const users = [{ name: 'Alice', age: 25 }, { name: 'Bob', age: 20 }];
users.sort((a, b) => a.age - b.age);
console.log(users); // [{ name: 'Bob', age: 20 }, { name: 'Alice', age: 25 }]
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

8. Dynamic Imports for Lazy Loading

Dynamic imports allow you to load modules only when needed, reducing initial load time.

const loadModule = async () => {
  const module = await import('./myModule.js');
  module.default(); // Calls the default export function
};
loadModule();
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

9. Default Parameters with Object Destructuring

When using default parameters, you can also destructure and set defaults for specific properties.

function createUser({ name = 'Guest', age = 18 } = {}) {
  console.log(name, age);
}
createUser();               // Guest 18
createUser({ name: 'Alice' }); // Alice 18
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

10. Use Object.assign() for Shallow Copying

Object.assign() is handy for shallow-copying objects without changing the original.

const original = { a: 1, b: 2 };
const copy = Object.assign({}, original);
copy.a = 3;
console.log(original.a); // 1 (unchanged)
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Follow me on github:

Jagroop2001 (Jagroop) Β· GitHub

πŸ‘¨β€πŸ’» Full Stack Developer | πŸ€– Machine Learning Developer | 🀝 Dev Relations Pro – πŸ’Ό Available for Hire - Jagroop2001

favicon github.com

11. Memoize Functions for Performance

Memoization caches results of expensive function calls based on arguments, useful for computationally heavy functions.

const memoize = (fn) => {
  const cache = {};
  return (...args) => {
    const key = JSON.stringify(args);
    if (!cache[key]) {
      cache[key] = fn(...args);
    }
    return cache[key];
  };
};
const slowSquare = (n) => n * n;
const memoizedSquare = memoize(slowSquare);
console.log(memoizedSquare(4)); // 16 (cached on second call)
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

12. Using reduce to Group Array Items

reduce() can group array items based on a property, often needed in data processing.

const people = [
  { name: 'Alice', role: 'admin' },
  { name: 'Bob', role: 'user' },
  { name: 'Charlie', role: 'admin' },
];
const grouped = people.reduce((acc, person) => {
  (acc[person.role] = acc[person.role] || []).push(person);
  return acc;
}, {});
console.log(grouped);
// { admin: [{ name: 'Alice' }, { name: 'Charlie' }], user: [{ name: 'Bob' }] }
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

13. Flatten Nested Arrays with Array.flat(Infinity)

Flattening multi-level nested arrays becomes straightforward with Array.flat(Infinity).

const nested = [1, [2, [3, [4]]]];
console.log(nested.flat(Infinity)); // [1, 2, 3, 4]
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

14. Toggle Boolean Value with !

Toggling a boolean value is as easy as applying the NOT operator twice.

let isVisible = false;
isVisible = !isVisible;
console.log(isVisible); // true
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

15. Merge Multiple Arrays with concat()

concat() is helpful for merging multiple arrays in a single statement.

const arr1 = [1, 2];
const arr2 = [3, 4];
const arr3 = [5, 6];
const merged = arr1.concat(arr2, arr3);
console.log(merged); // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

16. Asynchronous Array Iteration with for...of and await

When iterating over an array of promises, for...of with await ensures that each promise resolves before the next one runs.

const fetchData = async () => {
  const urls = ['url1', 'url2'];
  for (const url of urls) {
    const response = await fetch(url);
    console.log(await response.json());
  }
};
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

17. Get the Last Item in an Array Quickly

Retrieve the last item in an array without needing to know the length.

const arr = [1, 2, 3, 4];
console.log(arr.at(-1)); // 4
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

18. Use Intl for Date Formatting

Intl.DateTimeFormat offers a powerful way to format dates across locales.

const date = new Date();
const formatted = new Intl.DateTimeFormat('en-GB', {
  dateStyle: 'full',
}).format(date);
console.log(formatted); // e.g., "Monday, 25 October 2021"
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

19. Round Numbers with Math.round() and Template Literals

Template literals can format rounded numbers directly.

const num = 3.14159;
console.log(`${Math.round(num * 100) / 100}`); // 3.14
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

20. Convert Array-Like Objects to Arrays Using Array.from()

Use Array.from() to convert array-like objects (e.g., arguments) into real arrays.

function example() {
  const argsArray = Array.from(arguments);
  console.log(argsArray);
}
example(1, 2, 3); // [1, 2, 3]
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Each of these tricks simplifies common coding patterns in JavaScript. Integrate them into your workflow to write code that is both efficient and expressive.

Happy coding! πŸš€

Top comments (70)

Collapse
 
hraifi profile image
sewiko

This one is very new to me :

let count;
count ||= 10;
console.log(count); // 10
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

I really want such kind of functionality and till now I thought it doesn't exist but thanks to use. Now I don't require extra check for undefined or null value.

This is very very useful to me and also other tips as well.
Thanks for sharing @jagroop2001

Collapse
 
oculus42 profile image
Samuel Rouse

I recommend using ??= Nullish Coalescing Assignment rather that Logical OR assignment unless you specifically want to exclude falsy values rather than just nullish.

Collapse
 
jagroop2001 profile image
Jagroop Singh

@oculus42 ,
Great recommendation! Using ??= (Nullish Coalescing Assignment) is indeed a better choice when you want to assign values only if the left-hand side is null or undefined, excluding other falsy values. It helps avoid unintended overrides when falsy values like 0 or '' are present. Thanks for highlighting that distinction! If you have more tips, feel free to share!

Collapse
 
jagroop2001 profile image
Jagroop Singh

Thanks @hraifi , I also learn this from one of my senior.

Collapse
 
hraifi profile image
sewiko

I find your all blogs to be quite informative.

Thread Thread
 
jagroop2001 profile image
Jagroop Singh

❀️

Collapse
 
jovian profile image
Nick A

Yeah, I actually have never use that before either, I usually use ?? for a fallback value if I expect something maybe undefined/null.

Collapse
 
jagroop2001 profile image
Jagroop Singh

@jovian ,
That makes sense! The ?? operator is great for providing fallback values, especially when you want to handle undefined or null specifically

Collapse
 
berat_yilmaz_1ecd69d72810 profile image
Berat Yilmaz

This is ninja code; you should avoid such practices in projects. Writing code that is easily readable at a glance is important.

Collapse
 
jagroop2001 profile image
Jagroop Singh

It's your choice!!

Collapse
 
anirudh7065 profile image
anirudh7065

Same here i have never seen this ||= or this ??=

Collapse
 
rolandcsosz profile image
Roland CsΕ‘sz • Edited

Isn’t the new copy in trick 10 is a deep copy instead of a shallow copy? Shallow copies have the references to the original objects. Deep copies are deep cause there is no reference left in them and you can modify them without changing the originals.

Collapse
 
syeo66 profile image
Red Ochsenbein (he/him) • Edited

Try

const original = { a: { c: 1 }, b: 2 };
const copy = Object.assign({}, original);
copy.a.c = 3;
console.log(original.a.c); // 3 (changed!)
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

It's a shallow copy because nested objects stay referenced. For deep copies you should use structuredClone()

Collapse
 
rolandcsosz profile image
Roland CsΕ‘sz

Yes, you are totally right. With nested objects the result will be shallow copy but the example is still a deep copy. Object.assign can create deep and shallow copy based on the original object. The article has beginner hashtag on it and by the context of the trick I felt that the description is not showing example what it originally aimed for. πŸ˜…

Thread Thread
 
syeo66 profile image
Red Ochsenbein (he/him) • Edited

You're wrong.

For deep cloning, we need to use alternatives like structuredClone(), because Object.assign() copies property values.
If the source value is a reference to an object, it only copies the reference value.

Source: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/W...

Thread Thread
 
rolandcsosz profile image
Roland CsΕ‘sz

Nope. I think the problem here is that the example show the deep copy side of this new object with primitive properties. It's clearly says "without changing the original" but it can change the original if it had nested property. Yes, it's a useful trick if someone want to modify the primitive properties of a copy but the statement is not true for all use cases. For an article with the #beginner tag it's not so straightforward in my opinion.

The copy of an object whose properties all have primitive values fits the definition of both a deep copy and a shallow copy.

Source: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/G...

Collapse
 
jagroop2001 profile image
Jagroop Singh

@rolandcsosz ,
Great observation! The new copy in Trick 10 does indeed create a deep copy, as it avoids references to the original objects. Shallow copies only replicate the first level, retaining references to nested objects. Thanks for clarifying that distinction! It’s an important detail for understanding how data is managed in JavaScript. If you have any more thoughts, I’d love to hear them!

Collapse
 
khankudo profile image
KhanKudo • Edited

The ||= Operator from Trick 3 would be perfect for Trick 12, really a missed opportunity and classic example of "Do as I say, not as I do" hahaha

Collapse
 
jagroop2001 profile image
Jagroop Singh

@khankudo ,
Haha, that's a great point! The ||= operator would definitely fit well in Trick 12. It’s a classic case of learning from our own mistakes, right? Thanks for the feedback! If you have any other ideas or tweaks, I’m all ears!

Collapse
 
tracygjg profile image
Tracy Gilmore

On item 11, it is worth noting that function memorisation only really works for pure functions. If external state is modified and has the potential to impact the output, the cached values cannot be trusted.
Pure functions: same input => same output.

Collapse
 
jagroop2001 profile image
Jagroop Singh

Thanks for pointing it out πŸ‘

Collapse
 
skhmt profile image
Mike πŸˆβ€β¬›

For 19 you don't need to use a template literal, you can just console.log(Math.round(num * 100) / 100); directly

Collapse
 
jagroop2001 profile image
Jagroop Singh

@skhmt ,
You're absolutely right! Using console.log(Math.round(num * 100) / 100); is a straightforward way to round the number without the extra complexity of a template literal. Thanks for pointing that out! Always good to streamline the code. If you have more insights, feel free to share!

Collapse
 
iainsimmons profile image
Iain Simmons

Can't you just do num.toFixed(2)?

Thread Thread
 
jagroop2001 profile image
Jagroop Singh

Yes, using num.toFixed(2) is definitely an option. I prefer this in TypeScript, but keep in mind that it changes the number to a string. If you need to convert it back to a number, you'll have to do that separately, which can be a bit cumbersome.

Collapse
 
bondt profile image
Bondt

Also you can allow for decimal precision:

const round = (num, dec = 2) => { return Math.round(num * Math.pow(10, dec)) / Math.pow(10, dec) }```

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode
Collapse
 
idanen profile image
Idan Entin

Thanks! Must save as kind of a cheat-sheet.
I have this one coming up in PRs to turn big arrays to maped object (or a Map):

const mapped = Object.fromEntries(
  array.map((item) => [item.id, item])
)
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Also, for 12 (grouping an array) we have Object.groupBy() coming up πŸŽ‰

Collapse
 
the_riz profile image
Rich Winter

There's a difference between a Map and an Object.

Collapse
 
jagroop2001 profile image
Jagroop Singh

Yes there is !!

Collapse
 
idanen profile image
Idan Entin

Of course. I meant that creating a Map would look pretty similar: const mapped = new Map(array.map((item) => [item.id, item]));

Collapse
 
jagroop2001 profile image
Jagroop Singh

Nice @idanen , sounds like you've got some great refactoring going on!

Collapse
 
john12 profile image
john

What's the use of this Dynamic Imports for Lazy Loading?. Is it provide any benefit ?

Collapse
 
jagroop2001 profile image
Jagroop Singh

Hey @john12 ,
Dynamic imports allows us to load modules only when needed, reducing the initial load time and improving app performance.
This on-demand loading enhances user experience by ensuring faster interactions and reducing the overall bundle size.
It also enables code splitting, making it easier to manage and optimize your application efficiently.

Collapse
 
john12 profile image
john

ohh okay, got it.
Thank you for this wonderful explanation.

Thread Thread
 
jagroop2001 profile image
Jagroop Singh

your welcome @john12

Collapse
 
huiguang_xian profile image
huiguang xian

improve performance

Collapse
 
olivergrimsley profile image
Mike Oliver

On number 12, you can now just use Object.groupBy, developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/W... - however, reduce is extremely powerful and that example is a good example where you need to perform other operations on the grouped data.

Collapse
 
jagroop2001 profile image
Jagroop Singh

@olivergrimsley ,
Absolutely! With Object.groupBy, it’s become much simpler to group data in one line. But you're rightβ€”using reduce allows for more complex operations on the grouped data, making it a valuable tool in many situations. Both approaches have their merits, depending on the use case. Thanks for pointing that out! If you have more insights, I’d love to hear them!

Collapse
 
mehyaa profile image
Mehmet Yasin AKAR • Edited

Nice points, some of them has more modern alternatives like using spreading instead of Object.assign and array concat or Object.groupBy instead of using reduce workaround.

Using ||= for default values can cause unintended misbehaviors so mentioning ??= is would be nice πŸ‘πŸ»

Collapse
 
jagroop2001 profile image
Jagroop Singh

Thanks @mehyaa for sharing your thoughts!!

Collapse
 
robertjameszenith profile image
Robert James

Thanks for sharing @jagroop2001 Your function is really new for me , and it's also helpful ,

If I need a background removal service color code which one is perfect for me

Collapse
 
jagroop2001 profile image
Jagroop Singh

Thanks @robertjameszenith for the kind words! 😊 ,
As per my understanding,
If you want something with background removal in JavaScript, a tip is to use canvas to manipulate imagesβ€”applying ctx.clearRect on areas you want transparent works well. You can also use libraries like fabric.js or remove.bg API for more complex removals.

If it's not what you are looking for please explain your query in detail ?

Collapse
 
robertjameszenith profile image
Robert James

@jagroop2001 thank you for trying to understand my problem, yes remove bg is automatically remove any kind of photo, but remove.bg do not remove hair photo smoothly. I want to know you how can i implement remove background transparent background with color code in Zenith Clipping front page .

Image description

what is the latest code

Thread Thread
 
jagroop2001 profile image
Jagroop Singh

Okay, I understand your problem however I haven't collide with such type of issue before. remove bg works in my case but you can try pix2pix with TensorFlow.js if remove bg doesn't work. @robertjameszenith

Thread Thread
 
robertjameszenith profile image
Robert James

Thank you , If i face some problem i will contact you , please never mind

Thread Thread
 
jagroop2001 profile image
Jagroop Singh
Collapse
 
syeo66 profile image
Red Ochsenbein (he/him)

Look at those bots go... 🀣

Some comments may only be visible to logged-in visitors. Sign in to view all comments.