11763 l = o || "au-main-nav__content--open";
11764 else
11765 var a = o || "au-main-nav__content--open",
11766 l = t || "au-main-nav__content--closed";11767 !(function (e, n) {
11768 e.classList
11769 ? e.classList.remove(n)
11762 var a = t || "au-main-nav__content--closed",
11763 l = o || "au-main-nav__content--open";
11764 else
11765 var a = o || "au-main-nav__content--open",11766 l = t || "au-main-nav__content--closed";
11767 !(function (e, n) {
11768 e.classList
11755 "undefined" != typeof exports &&
11756 (Object.defineProperty(exports, "__esModule", { value: !0 }),
11757 eval("exports.default = AU"));
11758var AU = AU || {};11759!(function (e) {
11760 function n(e, n, t, o) {
11761 if ("opening" === n || "open" === n)
11624 (e.accordion = o);
11625})(AU),
11626 "undefined" != typeof module && (module.exports = AU);
11627var AU = AU || {};11628!(function (e) {
11629 function t(e, t, n) {
11630 if (e === t) return { stepSize: 0, steps: 0, intervalTime: 0 };
11507 i = o || "au-accordion--open";
11508 else
11509 var a = o || "au-accordion--open",
11510 i = n || "au-accordion--closed";11511 !(function (e, t) {
11512 e.classList
11513 ? e.classList.remove(t)
The var
keyword is soft-deprecated, and should not be used to redeclare existing variables.
It is possible to re-declare the same variable using the var
keyword:
var a = 1;
var a = 10; // valid!
However, this can have unintentional side effects on the code:
var x = 10;
{
var x = 20;
}
console.log(x); // 20
var db = dbDriver.loadTables()
{
var db = db.get("usersId:1234") // bad practice!
}
// always use 'let' or 'const'
const db = dbDriver.loadTables();
{
const users = db.get("userId:1234") // avoid shadowing
}