Possible Duplicates:
Why this kind of function invocation is wrong in JavaScript?
Is there any reason to wrap anonymous JavaScript functions in braces?
Is there a good explanation why I have to wrap an anonymous functions in parentheses before I can call it, like this:
(function() { alert('foo'); })();
instead of just
function() { alert('foo'); }();
?
There are other languages in which functions are just things you can pass around, like for example Clojure. In Clojure a function call looks like this: (function args), for example: (+ 1 2). You can just substitute an anonymous function anywhere you would normally use a named function: ((fn [a b] (+ a b)) 1 2). In Javascript this seems not to be the case.
(function() { alert('foo'); }());
+function() { alert('foo'); }();
. You may encounter a specific issue if you use parentheses.