I'm not sure what you're trying to do, but you cannot overwrite the value of foo
that way. When you specified var foo
in the global context, it is attached to the global object (in global scope).
When you then specified var foo
within your function, you declared it within the scope of that function. This means that it is unknown to the outside world+. What you could do, is something like this:
var fn = function() {
this.foo = "Setting foo from in a function";
};
Or to be more explicit:
var fn = function() {
window.foo = "Setting foo from in a function";
};
Is this what you want?
+ When you defined foo
inside the function, it was attached to the Activation object and not the Global object. Every time you enter the execution context for a function, a new Activation object is created. So every time you call the function, you're getting a new foo
. This is just as well, otherwise you wouldn't be able to create variables that are local in scope to the function; they would leak into the global context.
UPDATE
I guess you could do something like the following if you really want to evaluate code inside a function in a global context. It's ugly, and I'm not sure why you'd want to do it, but here goes:
var foo = 2;
var fn = function() {
var foo = 3;
}
console.log(foo); //prints 2
var fnSource = fn.toSource();
eval(fnSource.replace(/^\(function\s*\(\)\s*{/, "").replace(/}\s*\)$/, ""));
console.log(foo); //prints 3
This will strip out (function () {
and })
so that you end up with only the code in the middle, which you then run through eval
.
Once again, I have to stress that I don't recommend doing this.
fn
? You wantfn
to declare a new local variable and somehow have that overwrite the globally declaredfoo
? I'm confused about what it is you're asking.