From 9f0ae279d83a41bec3c9998c5245c46908942873 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Adam Brenecki Date: Tue, 5 Nov 2013 12:47:58 +1030 Subject: [javascript/en] Enforce 80-char line width --- javascript.html.markdown | 10 +++++----- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) diff --git a/javascript.html.markdown b/javascript.html.markdown index 2d665e67..b6d4c8b7 100644 --- a/javascript.html.markdown +++ b/javascript.html.markdown @@ -107,10 +107,10 @@ false; // There's also null and undefined null; // used to indicate a deliberate non-value -undefined; // used to indicate a value is not currently present (although undefined - // is actually a value itself) +undefined; // used to indicate a value is not currently present (although + // undefined is actually a value itself) -// false, null, undefined, NaN, 0 and "" are falsy, and everything else is truthy. +// false, null, undefined, NaN, 0 and "" are falsy; everything else is truthy. // Note that 0 is falsy and "0" is truthy, even though 0 == "0". /////////////////////////////////// @@ -306,8 +306,8 @@ myObj.myOtherFunc = myOtherFunc; myObj.myOtherFunc(); // = "HELLO WORLD!" // When you call a function with the new keyword, a new object is created, and -// made available to the function via the this keyword. Functions designed to be called -// like that are called constructors. +// made available to the function via the this keyword. Functions designed to be +// called like that are called constructors. var MyConstructor = function(){ this.myNumber = 5; -- cgit v1.2.3