Are you doing typical CRUD UI code? Use try catches, use loops that go to 10000 for no reason sprinkled in your code, hell, use angular/ember - you will not notice any performance issue.
If you are doing low level library, physics simulations, games, server-side etc then the never throwing try-catch block wouldn't normally matter at all but the problem is that V8 didn't support it in their optimizing compiler until version 6 of the engine, so the entire containing function that syntactically contains a try catch will not be optimized. You can easily work around this though, by creating a helper function like tryCatch
:
function tryCatch(fun) {
try {
return fun();
}
catch(e) {
tryCatch.errorObj.e = e;
return tryCatch.errorObj;
}
}
tryCatch.errorObj = {e: null};
var result = tryCatch(someFunctionThatCouldThrow);
if(result === tryCatch.errorObj) {
//The function threw
var e = result.e;
}
else {
//result is the returned value
}
After V8 version 6 (shipped with Node 8.3 and latest Chrome), the performance of code inside try-catch
is the same as that of normal code.
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…