304

Is there any difference between declaring a variable:

var a=0; //1

...this way:

a=0; //2

...or:

window.a=0; //3

in global scope?

7
  • 2
    AFAIK var a = 0; does not work in IE when accessing the variable via another external js file which is declared in another js file Feb 1, 2011 at 11:56
  • I donot know about window.a but the other 2 ways are the same in global scope.
    – programmer
    Feb 1, 2011 at 11:56
  • 1
    @AivanMonceller really? link please.
    – Raynos
    Feb 1, 2011 at 11:58
  • @Raynos, I experience it on my own website. IE6 to be specific. I could not get my var enum to appear which is on an external js file and i am referencing it as an inline javascript on an html file Feb 1, 2011 at 12:00
  • @Ashwini In the global scope, window is the global object (in browsers). var a = 1; console.log(a); console.log(win
    – leebriggs
    Feb 1, 2011 at 12:08

5 Answers 5

580

Yes, there are a couple of differences, though in practical terms they're not usually big ones (except for your #2 — a = 0; — which A)  I strongly recommend not doing, and B) is an error in strict mode).

There's a fourth way, and as of ES2015 (ES6) there's two more. I've added the fourth way at the end, but inserted the ES2015 ways after #1 (you'll see why), so we have:

var a = 0;                             // 1
let a = 0;                             // 1.1 (new with ES2015)
const a = 0;                           // 1.2 (new with ES2015)
a = 0;                                 // 2
window.a = 0; /*or*/ globalThis.a = 0; // 3
this.a = 0;                            // 4

Those statements explained

1. var a = 0;

This creates a global variable which is also a property of the global object, which we access as window on browsers (or via the globalThis global added in ES2020, or via this at global scope). Unlike some other properties, the property cannot be removed via delete.

In specification terms, it creates an identifier binding on the Object Environment Record for the global environment. That makes it a property of the global object because the global object is where identifier bindings for the global environment's Object Environment Record are held. This is why the property is non-deletable: It's not just a simple property, it's an identifier binding, and identifiers can't be removed.

The binding (variable) is defined before the first line of code runs (see "When var happens" below).

The property this creates is enumerable (except on the very obsolete IE8 and earlier).


1.1 let a = 0;

This creates a global variable which is not a property of the global object. This is a new thing as of ES2015.

In specification terms, it creates an identifier binding on the Declarative Environment Record for the global environment rather than the Object Environment Record. The global environment is unique in having a split Environment Record, one for all the old stuff that goes on the global object (the Object Environment Record) and another for all the new stuff (let, const, and the functions created by class) that don't go on the global object, but go in the global environment's Declarative Environment Record instead.

The binding is created before any step-by-step code in its enclosing block is executed (in this case, before any global code runs), but it's not accessible in any way until the step-by-step execution reaches the let statement. Once execution reaches the let statement, the variable is accessible. (See "When let and const happen" below.) The time between the binding being created (on entry to the scope) and becoming accessible (code execution reaching the let) is called the Temporal Dead Zone [TMZ]. While the binding is in that state, any attempt to read from it or write to it is a runtime error.

(The specification's terminology for whether the binding is accessible is whether it's "initialized," but don't confuse that use of "initialized" with having an initializer on the let statement [let a = 10; vs. just let a;]; they're unrelated. The variable defined by let a; is initialized with undefined once the let is reached.)


1.2 const a = 0;

Creates a global constant, which is not a property of the global object.

A const binding is exactly like a let binding (including the TMZ and such) except it has a flag saying its value cannot be changed. One implication of that is you must provide an initializer (the = value part) to provide the initial (and never-changing) value for the const.

Using const does three things for you:

  1. Makes it a runtime error if you try to assign to the constant (and most IDEs will flag it up for you more proactively than that).
  2. Documents its unchanging nature for other programmers.
  3. Lets the JavaScript engine optimize on the basis that the const's value won't change (without having to track whether it's written to later or not — e.g., doesn't have to check if it's effectively constant).

It's important to understand that the const's value never changing doesn't mean that an object the const refers to is immutable. It isn't. It just means that the value of the const can't be changed so it refers to a different object (or contains a primitive):

// This is fine:
const x1 = {a: 1};
console.log(x1.a); // 1
x1.a = 2;
//^^^^^^−−− No problem, just changing the object's state, not the value in the `const` (the object reference)
console.log(x1.a); // 2

// This is not:
const x2 = {a: 1};
console.log(x2.a); // 1
x2 = {a: 2};
// ^−−−−−−− Error here ("TypeError: Assignment to constant variable"),
// you can't change the value of a `const`
console.log(x2.a);


2 a = 0;

Don't do this. 😊 It's assigning to a completely undeclared identifier. In loose mode (the only mode before ES5), it creates a property on the global object implicitly. On my old blog, I call this The Horror of Implicit Globals. Thankfully, they fixed it with strict mode, added in ES5 and the default in new kinds of scopes (inside modules, inside class constructs, etc.). Strict mode makes assigning to an undeclared identifier the error it always should have been. It's one of several reasons to use strict mode.

Since it creates a normal property, you can delete it.

The property this creates is enumerable (except on the very obsolete IE8 and earlier).


3 window.a = 0; or globalThis.a = 0;

This creates a property on the global object explicitly, using the window global (on browsers) or the globalThis global that refers to the global object. As it's a normal property, you can delete it.

This property is enumerable (even on the very obsolete IE8 and earlier).


4 this.a = 0;

Exactly like #3, except we're referencing the global object through this instead of the globals window or globalThis. This works because this at global scope is the "global" this value. This is true even in strict mode. (Strict mode changes the this used when you call a function without supplying this, such as when you do fn(), but not what this is at global scope.) Note that it has to really be global scope. The top-level scope of modules is not global scope (it's module scope), and at module scope this is undefined.


Deleting properties

What do I mean by "deleting" or "removing" a? Exactly that: Removing the property (entirely) via the delete keyword:

window.a = 0;
console.log(`"a" in window? ${"a" in window}`); // "a" in window? true
delete window.a;
console.log(`"a" in window? ${"a" in window}`); // "a" in window? false

delete completely removes a property from an object. You can't do that with properties added to window indirectly via var, the delete is either silently ignored or throws an exception (depending on whether you're in strict mode).

(Minor note: The very obsolete IE8 and earlier, and the obsolete IE9-IE11 in their broken "compatibility" mode, wouldn't let you delete window properties even if you should have been allowed to.)


When var happens

Preface: var has no place in new code. Use let or const instead. But it's useful to understand var for the purposes of understanding old code you run across.

The variables defined via the var statement are created before any step-by-step code in the execution context is run, and so the variable (and its property on the global object) exists well before the var statement.

This can be confusing, so let's take a look. Here we have code trying to access a and b, followed by code in the middle creating them, and then code trying to access them again:

try {
    console.log(a);   // undefined
    console.log(b);   // ReferenceError: b is not defined
} catch (e) {
    console.error(e);
}

var a = "ayy";
b = "bee";            // Don't do this, but I didn't want to use `let` or `const` in this example

try {
    console.log(a);   // "ayy"
    console.log(b);   // "bee"
} catch (e) {
    console.error(e);
}

As you can see, the identifier a is defined (with the value undefined) before the first line runs, but the identifier b isn't, so trying to read its value is a ReferenceError. The statement var a = "ayy"; really deos two different things, at different times: On entry to the scope, it defines the identifier with the initial value undefined (the var a part), and later when it's reached in the execution of the code, it sets the value of a (the a = "ayy" part). Since a is defined before the first line of code runs, we can use it (and see its undefined value). This is known as "var hoisting" because the var a part is moved ("hoisted") to the top of the global scope or function scope where it appears, but the a = "ayy" part is left in its original location. (See Poor misunderstood var on my anemic old blog.)


When let and const happen

let and const are different from var in a couple of useful ways. The ways that are relevant to the question are A) that although the binding they define is created before any step-by-step code runs, it's not accessible until the let or const statement is reached; and B) as we've seen above, at global scope they don't create properties on the global object.

Re (A), while this using var runs:

console.log(a); // undefined
var a = 0;
console.log(a); // 0

This using let throws an error:

console.log(a); // ReferenceError: a is not defined
let a = 0;
console.log(a);

The other two ways that let and const differ from var, which aren't really relevant to the question, are:

  1. var always applies to the entire execution context (throughout global code, or throughout function code in the function where it appears; it jumps out of blocks), but let and const apply only within the block where they appear. That is, var has function (or global) scope, but let and const have block scope.

  2. Repeating var a in the same context is harmless, but if you have let a (or const a), having another let a or a const a or a var a is a syntax error.

Here's an example demonstrating that let and const take effect immediately in their block before any code within that block runs, but aren't accessible until the let or const statement:

let a = 0;          // (Doesn't matter whether this is `let`, `const`, or `var` [or even `class` or `function`])
console.log(a);     // 0
if (true) {
    console.log(a); // ReferenceError: a is not defined
    let a = 1;
    console.log(a);
}

Note that the second console.log fails, instead of accessing the a from outside the block, because within that block a refers to the a declared later in the block. But the console.log statement occurs within the Temporal Dead Zone for that inner a, so it causes an error.


Avoid cluttering global scope - use modules

Global scope is very, very cluttered. It has (at least):

  • Lots of global variables created via the spec (like undefined and NaN which, oddly, are globals rather than keywords; miscellanous global functions)
  • (On browsers) Variables for all DOM elements with an id and many with a name (provided the id/name value is a valid identifier; otherwise, they're just properties on window but not global variables)
  • (On browsers) Variables for window-specific things, like name, location, self...
  • Variables for all global-scope var statements
  • Variables for all global-scope let, const, and class statements

All of those globals are ripe with opportunities for conflicts with your code, such as this classic example on browsers:

var name = 42;
console.log(name);          // 42 - seems okay, but...
console.log(typeof name);   // ...string?!?!!

Why is name a string? Because it's an accessor property on window for the name of the window object, which is always a string. (The equivalent with let would work as expected, since the declarative environment record is conceptually nested within the object environment record, so the name binding created with let shadows the name binding for the accessor property.)

Whenever possible, don't add to the mess. Use modules instead. Top-level scope in modules is module scope, not global scope, so only other code in your module sees those top-level declarations. You can share information between modules via export and import.

Before modules, we used "scoping" functions wrapped around our code:

// From the ES5 era
(function () {
    var a = 0; // `a` is NOT a property of `window` now

    function example() {
        console.log(a);   // Shows "0", because `example` can access `a`
    }
    
    example();
})();

Modules make that obsolete.

10
  • can i do window['a']=0to make it clear i'm using window as a map? is window special such that some browsers don't allow this and force me to use window.a?
    – Jayen
    Feb 27, 2015 at 1:25
  • One note on #3 that's probably worth clarifying: window.a = 0; only works in browser environments, and only by convention. Binding the global object to a variable named window is not in the ES Spec and so will not work in, for example, V8 or Node.js, while this.a = 0; (when invoked in the global execution context) will work in any environment since the spec does specify that there must be a global object. If wrapping your code in an IIFE as in the Off-topic section, you can pass this as a parameter named window or global to get a direct reference to the global object. Apr 2, 2016 at 21:08
  • @Sherlock_HJ: I've added "on browsers;" that is earlier in the answer as well, but I added it in case people skip down to that. It is in the spec now; while it's only in passing, you won't find a browser that doesn't do it. I'm a bit surprised it's not in Annex B. Apr 3, 2016 at 7:23
  • @T.J.Crowder, So, a global variable declared with var a = 0; automatically becomes a property of the global object. If I declare var b = 0; within a function declaration, will it also be a property of some underlying object?
    – ezpresso
    May 15, 2016 at 20:49
  • 1
    I like the sentence It's not just a simple property, it's an identifier binding Jan 23, 2017 at 10:29
40

Keeping it simple :

a = 0

The code above gives a global scope variable

var a = 0;

This code will give a variable to be used in the current scope, and under it

window.a = 0;

This generally is same as the global variable.

6
  • Your statements "The code above gives a global scope variable" and "This code will give a variable to be used in the current scope, and under it", taken together, suggest that you can't use the first line and access a under the current scope. You can. Also, your use of "global variable" is a bit off -- the two places you say "global variable" are no more global than the place you don't say it. Feb 1, 2011 at 12:34
  • global itself means that you can access/read/write the variable anywhere, including the place where i mentioned current scope, that is so obvious. And if you suggest that window.a and 'a' wont be global in the script then you are 100% wrong. Feb 1, 2011 at 12:52
  • 3
    @Umair: "global itself means that you can access/read/write the variable anywhere" Right. Again, you seem to be calling out the first and last as more "global" than the middle, which of course they aren't. Feb 1, 2011 at 13:00
  • 4
    the middle one is considered to be used inside a function, all of them would be same if used under the main scope. using var inside a function was my assumption Feb 1, 2011 at 13:18
  • 4
    @Umair: "using var inside a function was my assumption" Ah, okay. But that's not the question. The question very clearly says "in global scope". If you're going to change the assumption (which is fair enough, to expand and explain a more general point), you'll need to be clear that's what you're doing in your answer. Feb 1, 2011 at 13:26
10
<title>Index.html</title>
<script>
    var varDeclaration = true;
    noVarDeclaration = true;
    window.hungOnWindow = true;
    document.hungOnDocument = true;
</script>
<script src="external.js"></script>

/* external.js */

console.info(varDeclaration == true); // could be .log, alert etc
// returns false in IE8

console.info(noVarDeclaration == true); // could be .log, alert etc
// returns false in IE8

console.info(window.hungOnWindow == true); // could be .log, alert etc
// returns true in IE8

console.info(document.hungOnDocument == true); // could be .log, alert etc
// returns ??? in IE8 (untested!)  *I personally find this more clugy than hanging off window obj

Is there a global object that all vars are hung off of by default? eg: 'globals.noVar declaration'

1
  • Very nice exploration. The definite guide to using window.* declaration. This declaration looks most safe against copy-pasting your code, and clear also.
    – Dan
    Nov 20, 2012 at 19:33
8

Bassed on the excellent answer of T.J. Crowder: (Off-topic: Avoid cluttering window)

This is an example of his idea:

Html

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
  <head>
    <script type="text/javascript" src="init.js"></script>
    <script type="text/javascript">
      MYLIBRARY.init(["firstValue", 2, "thirdValue"]);
    </script>
    <script src="script.js"></script>
  </head>

  <body>
    <h1>Hello !</h1>
  </body>    
</html>

init.js (Based on this answer)

var MYLIBRARY = MYLIBRARY || (function(){
    var _args = {}; // private

    return {
        init : function(Args) {
            _args = Args;
            // some other initialising
        },
        helloWorld : function(i) {
            return _args[i];
        }
    };
}());

script.js

// Here you can use the values defined in the html as if it were a global variable
var a = "Hello World " + MYLIBRARY.helloWorld(2);

alert(a);

Here's the plnkr. Hope it help !

5

In global scope there is no semantic difference.

But you really should avoid a=0 since your setting a value to an undeclared variable.

Also use closures to avoid editing global scope at all

(function() {
   // do stuff locally

   // Hoist something to global scope
   window.someGlobal = someLocal
}());

Always use closures and always hoist to global scope when its absolutely neccesary. You should be using asynchronous event handling for most of your communication anyway.

As @AvianMoncellor mentioned there is an IE bug with var a = foo only declaring a global for file scope. This is an issue with IE's notorious broken interpreter. This bug does sound familiar so it's probably true.

So stick to window.globalName = someLocalpointer

4
  • 2
    "In global scope there is no semantic difference." Actually, there's a huge semantic difference, the mechanisms by which the property gets defined are completely different -- but in practical terms it boils down to only a small actual difference (in that you can't delete a var). Feb 1, 2011 at 12:08
  • @T.J. Crowder I didn't know that. I thought variable declaration was setting properties on the variable object. Didn't know those couldn't be deleted.
    – Raynos
    Feb 1, 2011 at 12:42
  • Yup. They're also defined earlier if you use var. They're just completely different mechanisms that have much the same practical result. :-) Feb 1, 2011 at 12:44
  • @T.J. Crowder I forgot to mention that var jumps to the stop of scope.
    – Raynos
    Feb 1, 2011 at 12:58

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