| name | method-shorthand-jsdoc |
| description | Move helper functions into return objects using method shorthand for proper JSDoc preservation. Use when factory functions have internal helpers that should expose documentation to consumers, or when hovering over returned methods shows no JSDoc. |
| metadata | {"author":"epicenter","version":"1.0"} |
Method Shorthand for JSDoc Preservation
When factory functions have helper functions that are only used by returned methods, move them INTO the return object using method shorthand. This ensures JSDoc comments are properly passed through to consumers.
Related Skills: See factory-function-composition for the four-zone factory anatomy and the this decision rule.
The Problem
You write a factory function with a well-documented helper:
function createHeadDoc(options: { workspaceId: string }) {
const { workspaceId } = options;
function getEpoch(): number {
let max = 0;
for (const value of epochsMap.values()) {
max = Math.max(max, value);
}
return max;
}
return {
workspaceId,
getEpoch,
bumpEpoch(): number {
const next = getEpoch() + 1;
return next;
},
};
}
When you hover over head.getEpoch() in your IDE, you see... nothing. The JSDoc is lost.
The Solution
Move the helper INTO the return object using method shorthand:
function createHeadDoc(options: { workspaceId: string }) {
const { workspaceId } = options;
return {
workspaceId,
getEpoch(): number {
let max = 0;
for (const value of epochsMap.values()) {
max = Math.max(max, value);
}
return max;
},
bumpEpoch(): number {
const next = this.getEpoch() + 1;
return next;
},
};
}
Now hovering over head.getEpoch() shows the full JSDoc.
This matters even more when the public type derives from the factory:
export type HeadDoc = ReturnType<typeof createHeadDoc>;
With ReturnType, the returned object is the public type source. Put consumer-facing JSDoc directly on the returned method or getter so hover, completion, and Go to Definition all land on the same member.
Why This Works
- JSDoc attaches to the method definition site - when methods are inline in the return object, the JSDoc is directly on the property TypeScript sees
- Method shorthand uses
function semantics - this is bound to the object, so this.getEpoch() works
- No separate helper needed - if it's only used by sibling methods, it belongs in the same object
The Pattern
function createService(client) {
function fetchUser(id: string) { ... }
return {
fetchUser,
getProfile(id: string) {
return fetchUser(id);
},
};
}
function createService(client) {
return {
fetchUser(id: string) { ... },
getProfile(id: string) {
return this.fetchUser(id);
},
};
}
When to Apply
Use this pattern when:
- Helper functions are ONLY used by methods in the return object
- You want JSDoc visible when consumers hover over the method
- The helper doesn't need to be called before the return statement
Keep helpers separate when:
- They're called during initialization (before return)
- They're used by multiple factories (extract to shared module)
- They're truly internal and shouldn't be exposed
Arrow Functions Don't Work
Arrow functions don't have their own this:
return {
getEpoch: () => { ... },
bumpEpoch: () => {
this.getEpoch();
},
};
return {
getEpoch() { ... },
bumpEpoch() {
this.getEpoch();
},
};
Real Example
From packages/epicenter/src/core/docs/head-doc.ts:
export function createHeadDoc(options: { workspaceId: string; ydoc?: Y.Doc }) {
const { workspaceId } = options;
const ydoc = options.ydoc ?? new Y.Doc({ guid: workspaceId });
const epochsMap = ydoc.getMap<number>('epochs');
return {
ydoc,
workspaceId,
getEpoch(): number {
let max = 0;
for (const value of epochsMap.values()) {
max = Math.max(max, value);
}
return max;
},
bumpEpoch(): number {
const next = this.getEpoch() + 1;
epochsMap.set(ydoc.clientID.toString(), next);
return next;
},
};
}
Summary
| Approach | JSDoc Visible? | this Works? |
|---|
| Separate helper + reference | No | N/A |
| Arrow function in return | Yes | No |
| Method shorthand in return | Yes | Yes |
Method shorthand is the only approach that preserves JSDoc AND allows methods to call each other via this.
Where This Fits in the Factory Function Anatomy
Factory functions follow a four-zone internal shape: immutable state → mutable state → private helpers → return object. Method shorthand lives in the return object (zone 4)—the public API.
The this.method() vs direct-call decision depends on which zone the function lives in:
| Situation | Where it lives | How to call it |
|---|
| Only used by sibling methods in the return object | Zone 4 (return object, method shorthand) | this.method() |
| Used by return-object methods AND pre-return init logic | Zone 3 (private helper, standalone function) | Direct call: helperFn() |
| Used during initialization only, not exposed | Zone 3 (private helper) | Direct call: helperFn() |
When a helper needs to be in zone 3, its JSDoc won't be visible to consumers—but that's correct, because it's a private implementation detail. Only zone 4 methods need consumer-facing JSDoc.
See Closures Are Better Privacy Than Keywords for the full factory function anatomy.
References