In my RSS reader, I stumbled upon this code-golfed (i.e. minimised to death) snippet that's fairly clever, but from the code, utterly opaque.

I couldn't immediately see how it worked, and since Copilot autocompletes most of my code for me - whether I want to or not, I figured it was a good bit of practice to decompress and understand.

First things first: snooze the little copilot bastard for an hour!

Side note: because I got this post through my reader, I didn't happen to clock the link right after (in the newsletter) that read "a Redditor breaks down exactly what's going on". So…um…yeah, I guess wasted energy, but probably good for my brain.

Here's the original author's code:

// 33 bytes
const signal = F=>(f,G=F)=>F=f?_=>f(G?.()):F?.();

The crux is that it creates a wrapped stack of callbacks. Effectively recursion through locally defined (and overwritten) variables (G in this case).

I started by unpacking the implicit returns so I could see more of what was going on (and renamed F to callback)

const __signal = (callback) => {
  return (f, G=callback) => {
    return callback = f ? _ => f(G?.()) : callback?.()
  }
};

From there, I "simplified" everything as far as I could so that that all the neat tricks could be seen. This certainly isn't better code (probably a version of the one above with nicer names would work).

/**
 * The function stores local variables that are
 * overwritten * with a call stack of passed in
 * functions. When the argument is falsy, then
 * the stack is unwound.
 *
 * Call stack looks like: four(three(two(one())))
 */
function signal(/*F*/ callbackStack) {
  return (/*f*/ callback) => {
    // Each new time the signal singleton is called, it
    // creates a new copy of the `callbackStack`,
    // originally as an argument which saves on the
    // `const` part.

    const localCopy = callbackStack; /*G=F*/

    // if we're passed a callback, then redefine
    // `callbackStack` with where the local copy is
    // called first, then we run the callback.
    // Calling this singleton multiple times creates
    // a stack of functions like:
    //
    // four(three(two(one())))
    //
    // there's also the initial protection with `?.()`
    // to allow for `callbackStack` to be `undefined`.
    // In the example below, I've just unrolled the code.
    if (callback) { /*F=f?*/

      /*f(G?.())*/
      callbackStack = _ => {
        if (localCopy) {
          localCopy();
        }
        return callback();
      }

    } else {
      // otherwise, when called without any arguments,
      // and the `callbackStack` is executed and
      // overwritten at the same time.

      if (callbackStack) {
        callbackStack = callbackStack(); /*F?.()*/
      }
    }

    // the original code returns the `callbackStack`
    // through the implicit return, but it's not actually
    // used for anything, it's just a side effect of
    // compressing the code.
  }
}

Obviously this isn't the point of code-golf, to take someone's hard work and walk them back to the start (and probably even further back), but it was a good bit of brain exercise for me.

For comparison, here's the Redditor's explanation.