var gem = function() {
};
function gem() {
};
It looks to me they are the same. but I know there must be some difference between those two?
Anyone knows which one is better?
var gem = function() {
};
function gem() {
};
It looks to me they are the same. but I know there must be some difference between those two?
Anyone knows which one is better?
The first is an anonymous function that is part of an assignment expression. The function is created at the time of the assignment.
The second is a function declaration. It is "hoisted", which means its creation happens early, before any expression is evaluated.
Note the difference between this...
// TypeError, because the function has not been assigned
gem();
var gem = function() {};
and this...
// Works because the function declaration was hoisted.
gem();
function gem(){}
There is very little difference. The function name()
syntax will get "translated" into a var name = function
statement by your JavaScript interpreter before the code is run.
If you want to know more about this, I can recommend this article: JavaScript Scoping and Hoisting by Ben Cherry.
Note, by the way, that these are functions, not classes. JavaScript doesn't have classes, it has object inheritance.