From ef31a148a6d4fcacb566065d0a819fd3db2c9c63 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: =?UTF-8?q?Nicol=C3=B2=20Ribaudo?= Date: Fri, 8 Sep 2017 12:52:02 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] Remove outdated comment The described code was removed in 5f1c3c3b8de7b6f450d4a6b005e689c3f04477b0 (2 years ago!) --- src/util/identifier.js | 9 --------- 1 file changed, 9 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/util/identifier.js b/src/util/identifier.js index 1552410e23..c938eb9d5e 100644 --- a/src/util/identifier.js +++ b/src/util/identifier.js @@ -2,15 +2,6 @@ // @flow -// This is a trick taken from Esprima. It turns out that, on -// non-Chrome browsers, to check whether a string is in a set, a -// predicate containing a big ugly `switch` statement is faster than -// a regular expression, and on Chrome the two are about on par. -// This function uses `eval` (non-lexical) to produce such a -// predicate from a space-separated string of words. -// -// It starts by sorting the words by length. - function makePredicate(words: string): (str: string) => boolean { const wordsArr = words.split(" "); return function(str) {