show/hide this revision's text 2 fixing typo

It's an anonymous function being called.

The purpose of that is to create a new scope from which local variables don't bleed out. For example:

var test = 1;
(function() {
  var test = 2;
})();
test == 1 // true

One important note about this syntax is that you should get into the habit of terminating statements with a semi-colon, if you don't already. This is because Javascript allows line feeds between a function name and its parentheses when you call it.

The snippet below will cause an error:

var aVariable = 1
var myVariable = aVariable

(function() {/*...*/})()

Here's what it's actually doing:

var aVariable = 1;
var myVariable = aVariable(function() {/*...*/})
myVariable();

Another way of creating a new block scope is to use the following syntax:

new function() {/*...*/}

The difference is that the former technique does not affect where the keyword "this" points to, whereas the second does.

Javascript 1.8 also has a let statement that accomplishes the same thing, but needless to say, it's not supported by most browsers.

show/hide this revision's text 1

It's an anonymous function being called.

The purpose of that is to create a new scope from which local variables don't bleed out. For example:

var test = 1
(function() {
  var test = 2;
})();
test == 1 // true

One important note about this syntax is that you should get into the habit of terminating statements with a semi-colon, if you don't already. This is because Javascript allows line feeds between a function name and its parentheses when you call it.

The snippet below will cause an error:

var aVariable = 1
var myVariable = aVariable

(function() {/*...*/})()

Here's what it's actually doing:

var aVariable = 1;
var myVariable = aVariable(function() {/*...*/})
myVariable();

Another way of creating a new block scope is to use the following syntax:

new function() {/*...*/}

The difference is that the former technique does not affect where the keyword "this" points to, whereas the second does.

Javascript 1.8 also has a let statement that accomplishes the same thing, but needless to say, it's not supported by most browsers.