What's the difference between these?
var person = {
age: 25,
name: "David"
};
var person = (function() {
var name = "David", age = 25;
}());
My question really is, what does (function(){}())
do?
What does (function(){}())
do?
This essentially creates an anonymous function and then executes it. One common use for this is limiting global variables.
For example, the following would have three global variables (var1
, var2
, and var3
):
var var1 = "a", var2 = "b", var3 = "c";
If you wrapped these declarations in the anonymous function, they're still accessible as local variables within the anonymous function, yet do not cloud up the global namespace. For example:
(function() {
var var1 = "a", var2 = "b", var3 = "c";
console.log(var1); // interact with local variables
})(); // execute function.
What's the difference between these?
var person = {
age: 25,
name: "David"
};
If this code is contained in a function, it creates a local variable named person
. Otherwise, it creates a global variable named person
.
var person = (function() {
var name = "David", age = 25;
}());
This code creates and executes an anonymous function, then assigns the return code of that anonymous function to the variable person
. Since the anonymous function has no return value, the variable person
has a value of undefined
. This statement, as it currently stands, is functionally equivalent to var person;
, because the anonymous function has no side-effects and doesn't have a return value.
person.getName()
, so they're not really the same. If you want to use person.getName()
from the anonymous function version, you could use this: var person = (function() { this.getName = function() { return "Bob" }; return this; })();
var person = (function() {
var name = "David", age = 25;
}());
person will be undefined
, because the function doesn't have a return
statement.
It is just a self executing anonymous function, you could image that as below.
function foo() {
var name = "David", age = 25;
}
var person = foo();
undefined
value of the variable when the new
keyword is not used with the constructor
It executes the anonymous function you just created.
This technique is useful because it allows you to scope member in your class.
If you're looking for a good way to do classes and inheritance, take a look at http://ejohn.org/blog/simple-javascript-inheritance/
I'd also recommend defining your classes as AMD modules.
new
when calling the function - in which case it still wouldn't do the same thing as the object literal because creating variables with var
inside the function does not add them as properties to the returned object.
undefined
) toperson
.