Replacing arrow functions with regular functions is usually unproblematic:
var f = x => y;
var g = function(x) { return y; }
Or, in your specific example:
rowCheckStatuses.reduce((a, b) => a + b, 0);
rowCheckStatuses.reduce(function(a, b) { return a + b; }, 0);
However, be aware of the exceptions:
Arrow functions don't bind a this
value. Accessing this
in an arrow function might thus return the value of the enclosing execution context's this
:
function MyClass() {}
MyClass.prototype.f = () => this;
MyClass.prototype.g = function() { return this; }
myClass = new MyClass();
console.log(myClass.f()); // logs `Window`
console.log(myClass.g()); // logs `myClass`
Arrow functions also don't have access to a local arguments
object. Accessing arguments
in an arrow function might e. g. return the arguments
of an enclosing function:
function test() {
var f = () => arguments;
var g = function() { return arguments; }
console.log(f()); // logs test's arguments
console.log(g()); // logs g's arguments
}
test('x');
The same holds for new.target
and super
. See also What are the differences (if any) between ES6 arrow functions and functions bound with Function.prototype.bind?