|
|
|
|
|
by wirahx
1073 days ago
|
|
it's not. `toggle` is a pointer to a function name and "toggle()" appears to be an expression which is parsed and then executed (scary). you can on on:click={() => toggle()} in svelte which is more similar, but it isn't parsed and executed, it is a pointer to an anonymous function which is directly executed. on:click={toggle()} in svelte would run the function immediately (probably not what you want) and return the result as the handler for the on:click so quite different, really. |
|
<div onclick="toggle"> has existed since the dawn of JavaScript in Netscape Navigator 2.0 Beta Gold. Your complaint about the syntax is in fact baked into the foundations of the web.