florence
florence

Reputation: 101

parse error using esprima for file while optimizing js files with r.js

I am optimizing several js files into one using r.js. It works fine before. Recently,I modified some js code, add the code as:

var x = 08;

then it shows

ERROR:parse error using esprima for file D://webroot/js/a.js

ERROR:line 45: Unexpected token ILLEGAL.

Line 45 is where I add var x = 08, and 09 will show error too. It seemed that numbers begining with 0 meanwhile containing 8 or 9 is illegal. Maybe they were treated as bese 8 number .. ?

How can I let r.js ignore this point and still optimizie js files?

Upvotes: 10

Views: 13562

Answers (4)

Alessia
Alessia

Reputation: 959

I had the same problem too, while parsing a very long string:

var styleHTML = "<style>....</style>"

It turns out that in the string I also included some comments like this:

/* ... */

When I delete all the css comments in the string, it works!

Hope this helps.

Upvotes: 0

Azadrum
Azadrum

Reputation: 746

i had the same error when i forgot the question mark on my one-line if statement, inside a require js module.

Wrong line:

var check = self.currentScroll() > self.lastScroll() ? 1 : self.currentScroll() < self.lastScroll() -1 : 0

Corrected :

var check = self.currentScroll() > self.lastScroll() ? 1 : self.currentScroll() < self.lastScroll() ? -1 : 0

Upvotes: 0

Pascal
Pascal

Reputation: 2405

i had the same problem

Turn out that it was just a double comma while requiring files. Ex

define([
 'file1',
 'file2',
 'file3',,
 'file4'

Hope this helps

Upvotes: 15

Louis
Louis

Reputation: 151401

The error is due to Esprima, which r.js uses internally. To replicate the problem, you can go to this page and type in var x = 08;

Generally speaking, it seems that JavaScript interpreters will treat a number with a leading zero that can be interpreted as an octal number as an octal number but if it cannot be interpreted as an octal number (e.g. 08), then they will treat it as decimal.

I've done a test with Node.js and got this:

$ node
> 07
7
> 08
8
> 09
9
> 010
8
> 

And for even more fun:

> (function () {'use strict'; var x = 08;})()
undefined
> (function () {'use strict'; var x = 012;})()
SyntaxError: Octal literals are not allowed in strict mode.
[ ... traceback deleted ...]

When strict mode is on, octals are illegal.

I would avoid octals and never prefix any number with zeros in JavaScript.

Upvotes: 5

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