this...
function myThing(int) {
const result = int >> 3;
return (result % int) > 0 ? result : int;
}
You would have to capture the closure somehow
function myThing(int) { break; const result = (break, int >> 3); break; return (break, (break, result % int) > 0) ? (break, result) : (break, result); }
OK, so the theoretical scanner would need to be able to see that Line 2 relies on line 1 for state
Обсуждают сегодня