103

Looking at an online source code I came across this at the top of several source files.

var FOO = FOO || {};
FOO.Bar = …;

But I have no idea what || {} does.

I know {} is equal to new Object() and I think the || is for something like "if it already exists use its value else use the new object.

Why would I see this at the top of a source file?

1
  • Note: The question was edited to reflect that this is a code pattern commonly seen at the top of Javascript source files. Jun 22, 2011 at 16:42

8 Answers 8

155

Your guess as to the intent of || {} is pretty close.

This particular pattern when seen at the top of files is used to create a namespace, i.e. a named object under which functions and variables can be created without unduly polluting the global object.

The reason why it's used is so that if you have two (or more) files:

var MY_NAMESPACE = MY_NAMESPACE || {};
MY_NAMESPACE.func1 = {
}

and

var MY_NAMESPACE = MY_NAMESPACE || {};
MY_NAMESPACE.func2 = {
}

both of which share the same namespace it then doesn't matter in which order the two files are loaded, you still get func1 and func2 correctly defined within the MY_NAMESPACE object correctly.

The first file loaded will create the initial MY_NAMESPACE object, and any subsequently loaded file will augment the object.

Usefully, this also allows asynchronous loading of scripts that share the same namespace which can improve page loading times. If the <script> tags have the defer attribute set you can't know in which order they'll be interpreted, so as described above this fixes that problem too.

5
  • 3
    This is exactly the case, there are a couple of js files with the exact same declaration at the beginning, thanks a lot! Jun 22, 2011 at 12:19
  • 43
    +1 for reading between the lines and explaining the reasons for doing it. It's always good when someone gives the answer that the user actually wanted rather than just the one he asked for. :)
    – Spudley
    Jun 22, 2011 at 12:32
  • 1
    i like to say it's the #ifndef/#define for javascript :) Jun 22, 2011 at 17:15
  • 2
    || is also really useful when you want to provide optional arguments and initialize them to defaults if not provided: function foo(arg1, optarg1, optarg2) { optarg1 = optarg1 || 'default value 1'; optarg2 = optart2 || 'defalt value 2';}
    – crazy2be
    Jun 22, 2011 at 19:24
  • 1
    @crazy2be that doesn't work if the default is truthy, but falsey values are also legal, since the || operator can't tell undefined from falsey.
    – Alnitak
    Jun 26, 2011 at 14:02
25
var AEROTWIST = AEROTWIST || {};

Basically this line is saying set the AEROTWIST variable to the value of the AEROTWIST variable, or set it to an empty object.

The double pipe || is an OR statement, and the second part of the OR is only executed if the first part returns false.

Therefore, if AEROTWIST already has a value, it will be kept as that value, but if it hasn't been set before, then it will be set as an empty object.

it's basically the same as saying this:

if(!AEROTWIST) {var AEROTWIST={};}

Hope that helps.

2
  • 1
    actually the scope would be fine in your last example because JS doesn't have block scope
    – Alnitak
    Jun 22, 2011 at 12:17
  • @Alnitak - meh, you're right; I've been working with closures too much lately and I've forgotten the basics. I'll edit the answer.
    – Spudley
    Jun 22, 2011 at 12:19
11

There are two main parts that var FOO = FOO || {}; covers.

#1 Preventing overrides

Imagine you have your code split over multiple files and your co-workers are also working on an Object called FOO. Then it could lead to the case that someone already defined FOO and assigned functionality to it (like a skateboard function). Then you would override it, if you were not checking if it already exists.

Problematic case:

// Definition of co-worker "Bart" in "bart.js"
var FOO = {};

FOO.skateboard = function() {
  alert('I like skateboarding!');
};

// Definition of co-worker "Homer" in "homer.js"
var FOO = {};

FOO.donut = function() {
  alert('I like donuts!');
};

In this case the skateboard function will be gone if you load the JavaScript file homer.js after bart.js in your HTML because Homer defines a new FOO object (and thus overrides the existing one from Bart) so it only knows about the donut function.

So you need to use var FOO = FOO || {}; which means "FOO will be assigned to FOO (if it exists already) or a new blank object (if FOO does not exist already).

Solution:

var FOO = FOO || {};

// Definition of co-worker Bart in bart.js
FOO.skateboard = function() {
  alert('I like skateboarding!');
};

// Definition of co-worker Homer in homer.js
var FOO = FOO || {};

FOO.donut = function() {
  alert('I like donuts!');
};

Because Bart and Homer are now checking for the existence of FOO before they define their methods, you can load bart.js and homer.js in any order without overriding each other's methods (if they have different names). So you will always get a FOO object which has the methods skateboard and donut (Yay!).

#2 Defining a new object

If you've read through the first example then you already now what's the purpose of the || {}.

Because if there is no existing FOO object then the OR-case will become active and creates a new object, so you can assign functions to it. Like:

var FOO = {};

FOO.skateboard = function() {
  alert('I like skateboarding!');
};
7

Another common use for || is to set a default value for an undefined function parameter also:

function display(a) {
  a = a || 'default'; // here we set the default value of a to be 'default'
  console.log(a);
}

// we call display without providing a parameter
display(); // this will log 'default'
display('test'); // this will log 'test' to the console

The equivalent in other programming usually is:

function display(a = 'default') {
  // ...
}
1
  • You don't need var in front of a, a enters the function's execution context as a formal parameter, hence it is already declared. Apr 5, 2013 at 22:30
3

If there is no value in AEROTWIST or it is null or undefined the value assigned to the new AEROTWIST will be {} (a blank object)

1

The || operator takes two values:

a || b

If a is truthy, it will return a. Otherwise, it will return b.

The falsy values are null, undefined, 0, "", NaN and false. The truthy values are everything else.

So if a has not been set (is it undefined) it will return b.

11
  • I'm not sure truthy and falsey should be perpetuated as actual words. Amusing, but not exactly standard. :-)
    – Orbling
    Jun 22, 2011 at 12:25
  • 4
    @Orbling they're quite commonly used to talk about such values in JS.
    – Alnitak
    Jun 22, 2011 at 13:18
  • +1 for describe the operator correctly, since it isn't a logical operator. Sometimes it's called "default operator".
    – Tim Büthe
    Jun 22, 2011 at 13:28
  • @Tim The only difference between || in JS (and Perl) and the version in C, C++ and Java is that JS doesn't cast the result to a boolean. It's still a logical operator.
    – Alnitak
    Jun 22, 2011 at 13:36
  • @Alnitak: Possibly due to the non-professional background of JS developers in the past.
    – Orbling
    Jun 22, 2011 at 14:21
0

For || operations, JS will return the FIRST "truthy" value it finds (reading left-to-right):

var bob = false || undefined ||  0  ||  null || "hi"
//          ^          ^         ^      ^        ^
//          nope       nope      nope   nope     yip
//
// => bob = "hi"

// --------------
// breaking
// --------------
var bob = false || "hi" ||  0  ||  null || undefined
//          ^       ^
//          nope    yip <-- stops here
//                          the rest are ignored
//
// => bob = "hi"

Another trick is to use the && (and) to ensure something exists before accessing it.

For && operations, JS will return the LAST "truthy" value it finds (reading left-to-right).

For example if you're trying to read a property from a multi-level object.

var obj = {
        foo : {
            bar : "hi"
        }
    }

var bob = obj && obj.foo && obj.foo.bar;
//          ^        ^              ^
//          yip      yip            use this
//
// => bob = "hi"

// --------------
// breaking:
// --------------
var bob = obj && obj.foo && obj.foo.sally && obj.foo.bar;
//        ^          ^              ^
//        yip        yip            nope  <-- stops here, 
//                   ^                        and returns the last "yip"
//                   |                        the rest are ignored   |
//                   '-----------------------------------------------'
//
// => bob = obj.foo

Both || and && operations are read left-to-right... so you can have things that might normally throw errors toward the right side, since JS will simply stop reading left-to-right once it detects a truthy/falsey value.

-1

Notice that in some version of IE this code won't work as expected. Because the var, the variable is redefined and assigned so – if I recall correctly the issue – you'll end up to have always a new object. That should fix the issue:

var AEROTWIST;
AEROTWIST = AEROTWIST || {};

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