ECMAScript 2016
Posted: Fri Oct 27, 2023 9:07 am
ECMAScript 2016
JavaScript Version Numbers
Old JS versions are named by numbers: ES5 (2009) and ES6 (2015).
From 2016, versions are named by year: ECMAScript 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, ...
New Features in ECMAScript 2016
This chapter introduces the new features in ECMAScript 2016:
JavaScript Exponentiation (**)
JavaScript Exponentiation assignment (**=)
JavaScript Array includes()
Exponentiation Operator
The exponentiation operator (**) raises the first operand to the power of the second operand.
Example
let x = 5;
let z = x ** 2;
Try it Yourself »
x ** y produces the same result as Math.pow(x, y):
Example
let x = 5;
let z = Math.pow(x,2);
Try it Yourself »
Exponentiation Assignment
The exponentiation assignment operator (**=) raises the value of a variable to the power of the right operand.
Example
let x = 5;
x **= 2;
Try it Yourself »
The Exponentiation Operator is supported in all modern browsers since March 2017:
Chrome 52
Edge 14
Firefox 52
Safari 10.1
Opera 39
Jul 2016
Aug 2016
Mar 2017
Mar 2017
Aug 2016
JavaScript Array includes()
ECMAScript 2016 introduced Array.includes to arrays.
This allows us to check if an element is present in an array:
Example
const fruits = ["Banana", "Orange", "Apple", "Mango"];
fruits.includes("Mango");
Try it Yourself »
Array.includes is supported in all modern browsers since August 2016:
Chrome 47
Edge 14
Firefox 43
Safari 9
Opera 34
Dec 2015
Aug 2016
Dec 2015
Oct 2015
Dec 2015
★
+1
Reference: https://www.w3schools.com/js/js_2016.asp
JavaScript Version Numbers
Old JS versions are named by numbers: ES5 (2009) and ES6 (2015).
From 2016, versions are named by year: ECMAScript 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, ...
New Features in ECMAScript 2016
This chapter introduces the new features in ECMAScript 2016:
JavaScript Exponentiation (**)
JavaScript Exponentiation assignment (**=)
JavaScript Array includes()
Exponentiation Operator
The exponentiation operator (**) raises the first operand to the power of the second operand.
Example
let x = 5;
let z = x ** 2;
Try it Yourself »
x ** y produces the same result as Math.pow(x, y):
Example
let x = 5;
let z = Math.pow(x,2);
Try it Yourself »
Exponentiation Assignment
The exponentiation assignment operator (**=) raises the value of a variable to the power of the right operand.
Example
let x = 5;
x **= 2;
Try it Yourself »
The Exponentiation Operator is supported in all modern browsers since March 2017:
Chrome 52
Edge 14
Firefox 52
Safari 10.1
Opera 39
Jul 2016
Aug 2016
Mar 2017
Mar 2017
Aug 2016
JavaScript Array includes()
ECMAScript 2016 introduced Array.includes to arrays.
This allows us to check if an element is present in an array:
Example
const fruits = ["Banana", "Orange", "Apple", "Mango"];
fruits.includes("Mango");
Try it Yourself »
Array.includes is supported in all modern browsers since August 2016:
Chrome 47
Edge 14
Firefox 43
Safari 9
Opera 34
Dec 2015
Aug 2016
Dec 2015
Oct 2015
Dec 2015
★
+1
Reference: https://www.w3schools.com/js/js_2016.asp