Although you can refer to a "true" global variable through replacing all usage of that global variable with window["varname"], it is usually not a good idea to "pollute" the global namespace. The Closure Compiler is designed to discourage you from doing this.
CAVEAT: window["varname"] and var varname are not the same, as "window" may not always be the global object in non-browser environments. As a matter of fact, the Closure Compiler assumes that the global object and "window" are different. For example, window["varname"] will compile to window.varname instead of var varname. They are NOT the same, although in a browser they work similarly.
It is best to make a global namespace object, then only export that one object. All your "global" variables should become properties under this global namespace variable. Benefits:
- All those global variables are renamed to shorter versions
- Inlining of constants can happen
- The Closure Compiler automatically "flattens" the namespace anyway, so your code won't be any slower
- Superior obfuscation
- Your code also works in non-browser environments. Remember, "window" may not always exists (e.g. in server-side code) and the "global object" may not always be "window"
If you have global variables that the user must read/set to use your library, it is also discouraged. It is better to expose an API on the global namespace object, then expose the public API's as usual through the window object: window["myLib"]["setConfig"] = myLib.setConfig.
In your case, if you have global variables used in other parts of your non-Closure-Compiled code, you have to consider:
- Is it better to put the declaration of those variables outside of the file being compiled by Closure
- Why are you not putting the declaration of those variables together with the code using them
- Should you actually be Closure-compiling all the code instead of only a portion (it is possible? Do you use another library?)