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Have you ever taken a look under the hood at the jQuery 1.4 source code and noticed how it's encapsulated in the following way:

(function( window, undefined ) {

  //All the JQuery code here 
  ...

})(window);

I've read an article on JavaScript Namespacing and another one called "An Important Pair of Parens," so I know some about what's going on here.

But I've never seen this particular syntax before. What is that undefined doing there? And why does window need to be passed and then appear at the end again?

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5 Answers 5

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The undefined is a normal variable and can be changed simply with undefined = "new value";. So jQuery creates a local "undefined" variable that is REALLY undefined.

The window variable is made local for performance reasons. Because when JavaScript looks up a variable, it first goes through the local variables until it finds the variable name. When it's not found, JavaScript goes through the next scope etc. until it filters through the global variables. So if the window variable is made local, JavaScript can look it up quicker. Further information: Speed Up Your JavaScript - Nicholas C. Zakas

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  • 1
    Thanks! that was a very informative video. I think you need to edit your response to say "the window variable is made local". I do think this is the best answer. I counted and found that the window object is called at least 17 times in the JQuery source code. So there's got to be a significant effect in moving the window into the Local Scope.
    – dkinzer
    Apr 26, 2010 at 20:47
  • @DKinzer Oh yes, you're rght, of course it's made local. Glad I could help you =)
    – Vincent
    Apr 27, 2010 at 15:00
  • 1
    According to this updated test jsperf.com/short-scope/5 passing 'window' is actually slower, when it come to get a window constant through jQuery, and particularly bad for Safari. So while 'undefined' has a use case, I am not quite convinced that 'window' is particularly useful in all cases.
    – hexalys
    Apr 28, 2013 at 10:38
  • 1
    It has also a positive effect for minifying the code. So every usage of "window" and "undefined" can be replaced with a shorter name by the minifyer.
    – TLindig
    Jun 6, 2013 at 8:05
  • 2
    @lukas.pukenis When you're making a library that's used in millions of websites, it's wise not to make assumptions about what madmen will do.
    – JLRishe
    Sep 1, 2014 at 18:56
55

Undefined

By declaring undefined as an argument but never passing a value to it ensures that it is always undefined, as it is simply a variable in the global scope that can be overwritten. This makes a === undefined a safe alternative to typeof a == 'undefined', which saves a few characters. It also makes the code more minifier-friendly, as undefined can be shortened to u for example, saving a few more characters.

Window

Passing window as an argument keeps a copy in the local scope, which affects performance: http://jsperf.com/short-scope. All accesses to window will now have to travel one level less up the scope chain. As with undefined, a local copy again allows for more aggressive minification.


Sidenote:

Though this may not have been the intention of the jQuery developers, passing in window allows the library to be more easily integrated in server-side Javascript environments, for example node.js - where there is no global window object. In such a situation, only one line needs to be changed to replace the window object with another one. In the case of jQuery, a mock window object can be created and passed in for the purpose of HTML scraping (a library such as jsdom can do this).

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    +1 for mentioning Minification , wish I could +2 for the jsperf -- The minified version is (function(a,b){})(window); -- a and b are much shorter than window and undefined :)
    – gnarf
    Feb 9, 2011 at 13:25
  • +1 I had heard of scope chain before, but forgot the term. Thanks!
    – alex
    Feb 9, 2011 at 13:25
  • It's also an alternative to using void(0) which was meant for the same reason: void(0) is a safe way to get the undefined value.
    – glmxndr
    Feb 9, 2011 at 13:26
  • "What you say" is in reference to this other question: stackoverflow.com/questions/4945265/…
    – gnarf
    Feb 9, 2011 at 13:46
  • @gnarf, thanks for the notification that the questions were merged. I'll edit my answer to make a little more sense ;)
    – David Tang
    Feb 9, 2011 at 13:48
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Others have explained undefined. undefined is like a global variable that can be redefined to any value. This technique is to prevent all undefined checks from breaking if someone wrote say, undefined = 10 somewhere. An argument that is never passed is guaranteed to be real undefined irrespective of the value of the variable undefined.

The reason to pass window can be illustrated with the following example.

(function() {
   console.log(window);
   ...
   ...
   ...
   var window = 10;
})();

What does the console log? The value of window object right? Wrong! 10? Wrong! It logs undefined. Javascript interpreter (or JIT compiler) rewrites it this way -

(function() {
   var window; //and every other var in this function

   console.log(window);
   ...
   ...
   ...
   window = 10;

})();

However, if you get the window variable as an argument, there is no var and hence no surprises.

I don't know if jQuery is doing it, but if you are redefining window local variable anywhere in your function for whatever reason, it is a good idea to borrow it from global scope.

6

window is passed in like that just in case someone decides to redefine the window object in IE, I assume the same for undefined, in case it's re-assigned in some way later.

The top window in that script is just naming the argument "window", an argument that's more local that the global window reference and it what the code inside this closure will use. The window at the end is actually specifying what to pass for the first argument, in this case the current meaning of window...the hope is you haven't screwed up window before that happens.

This may be easier to think of by showing the most typical case used in jQuery, plugin .noConflict() handling, so for the majority of code you can still use $, even if it means something other than jQuery outside this scope:

(function($) {
  //inside here, $ == jQuery, it was passed as the first argument
})(jQuery);
3
  • Thanks. This makes a lot of sense. Though, I think the answer is a combination of this and what @C.Zakas says.
    – dkinzer
    Apr 26, 2010 at 20:50
  • @DKinzer I'm afraid I'm not C. Zakas ;)
    – Vincent
    Apr 27, 2010 at 15:02
  • @Vincent, sorry about that :-)
    – dkinzer
    Apr 27, 2010 at 15:14
5

Tested with 1000000 iterations. This kind of localization had no effect in performance. Not even a single millisecond in 1000000 iterations. This is simply useless.

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    Not to mention, closure carries all variable along with instance of function, so if you have 100 bytes in closure, and 1000 instances that is 100kb of more memory.
    – Akash Kava
    Jul 31, 2013 at 8:50
  • @AkashKava and @Semra, i don't think this test really accounts for why you would pass in window in a real world situation. The performance gain is only going to be seen when you have deeply nested closures that access that variable further along the scope chain. obviously if your function is only one step away on the scope chain from the variable, you won't see much gain. but if it was waaaay down there and needed to get window you might see some gain by a local copy.
    – gabereal
    Dec 2, 2014 at 21:42
  • @gabereal new JavaScript engines resolves closures at time of compilation itself, there is no performance gain in closure at runtime. I doubt there is any measurable performance gain, if you are so confident, you can create jsperf example to demonstrate performance. The only performance we get is by isolating closures which results in better minification which reduces size and performance is achieved by faster download and parsing of script.
    – Akash Kava
    Dec 4, 2014 at 10:59
  • @AkashKava what makes you think i'm so confident? I just said "might see some gain" and "i don't think". I could create a test, but i'd rather not since i never use this pattern anyway. can you explain what you mean by "resolves closures at time of compilation itself"? as opposed to what alternative? how did Javascript engines do things differently before?
    – gabereal
    Dec 4, 2014 at 21:36
  • Have a find a code where window is curried at the end but not entered in the function's parameters, what does mean? it ensure that the parameters follow the original global's scope object even if there isn't any window param I assume?
    – DiaJos
    Jan 22, 2019 at 23:10

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