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I was trying to figure out what entities (ex. variable, property, function, object, etc.) defined in one <script> block would be visible to other <script> block.

After some study, it seems to me that:

  1. From one <script> block, only the variables/properties that are attached with global window object, are accessible to other <script> block.

  2. For a function/object or expression to be accessed to other <script> block, it must be attached to the window object by means of a variable/property.

  3. Variables that are defined outside any function scope with/without var keyword, become part of window object/global context.

  4. Variables defined inside a function without var keyword, become part of window object/global context.

  5. There is no other ways to be inside the window object/global context and thus accessible to cross <script> block.

I know the fifth point is pretty bold, but it seemed correct to me.

Is this correct? If not, what's wrong?

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  • What's the difference between (1) and (2)? Please provide code examples for each point - this is a programming forum after all. Jun 11, 2012 at 20:56

3 Answers 3

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window is global. Everything else is local to the current closure (which in JS is the current function, not the current "block"). Undeclared variables (those without var) become properties of the window and are therefore globally accessible. window is implied when a local variable can't be found (so location will either give the contents of a local variable called location, if there is one, or window.location otherwise).

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All SCRIPT blocks of a web-page share the same global object. Therefore, if one SCRIPT block defines a global variable/function, all subsequent SCRIPT blocks will be able to access it.

The global object is referenced by the window global variable.


In global code, all variables and function declarations become properties of the global object:

var x;

function fn () {}

Here, you can access the x variable with x, or window.x, self.x. Same goes for fn.


In function code, local variables and nested functions do not become properties of the global object:

function fn () {
    var local_x;
    function local_fn () {}
}
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From one block, only the variables/properties that are attached with global window object, are accessible to other block.

Wrong. Every property in host objects or built-in objects is accessible. This includes the global object, but also things like Function.prototype.

For a function/object or expression to be accessed to other block, it must be attached to the window object by means of a variable/property.

No. As stated above, it can be attached anywhere. Or even stored in localStorage, cookie etc.

Variables that are defined outside any function scope with/without var keyword, become part of window object/global context.

Variables defined inside a function without var keyword, become part of window object/global context.

I know what you mean, but let's be precise: Variables cannot be defined without var keyword. You are talking about implicitly accessing properties of the global object. And yes, using var outside a function does so too.

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  • Thank you for your very precise answer. Ohh.. I have really missed the host objects. Jun 12, 2012 at 16:31

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