Question

When porting a javascript library to Python, I found this code:

return Math.atan2(
    Math.sqrt(
       (_ = cosφ1 * sinΔλ) * _ + (_ = cosφ0 * sinφ1 - sinφ0 * cosφ1 * cosΔλ) * _
    ), 
    sinφ0 * sinφ1 + cosφ0 * cosφ1 * cosΔλ
);

Am I wrong or (_ = cosφ1 * sinΔλ) * _ could be written like Math.pow(cosφ1 * sinΔλ, 2)?

I guess the author is trying to avoid using Math.pow, is this expensive in javascript compared to the temporary assignment?

[update]

As of late 2016, with Chrome 53.0 (64-bit) looks like the difference is not as large as it used to be.

Was it helpful?

Solution

The only reason I can think of is performance. First let's test if they actually do the same and we didn't overlook something.

var test = (test = 5 * 2) * test; // 100
Math.pow(5 * 2, 2); // 100

As expected, that's proven to do the same. Now let's see if they have different performances using jsperf. Check it out here: http://jsperf.com/...num-self

The differences for Firefox 23 are very small, but for Safari the difference was much bigger. Using Math.pow seems to be more expensive there.

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