113

I was recently comparing the current version of json2.js with the version I had in my project and noticed a difference in how the function expression was created and self executed.

The code used to wrap an anonymous function in parenthesis and then execute it,

(function () {
  // code here
})();

but now it wraps the auto-executed function in parenthesis.

(function () {
  // code here
}());

There is a comment by CMS in the accepted answer of Explain JavaScript’s encapsulated anonymous function syntax that “both: (function(){})(); and (function(){}()); are valid.”

I was wondering what the difference is? Does the former take up memory by leaving around a global, anonymous function? Where should the parenthesis be located?

3

4 Answers 4

67

They're virtually the same.

The first wraps parentheses around a function to make it a valid expression and invokes it. The result of the expression is undefined.

The second executes the function and the parentheses around the automatic invocation make it a valid expression. It also evaluates to undefined.

I don't think there's a "right" way of doing it, since the result of the expression is the same.

> function(){}()
SyntaxError: Unexpected token (
> (function(){})()
undefined
> (function(){return 'foo'})()
"foo"
> (function(){ return 'foo'}())
"foo"
9
  • 8
    JSLint wants "(function(){}());". JSLint says, "Move the invocation into the parens that contain the function."
    – XP1
    Jul 18, 2011 at 11:05
  • 28
    Actually you are not limited to those two, you can use just about anything that makes the compiler realize the function is part of an expression and not a statement, such as +function(){}() or !function(){}().
    – Tgr
    Jul 25, 2011 at 22:49
  • 50
    @XP1: JSLint wants lots of things that are specific to Crockford's style rather than being substantive. This is one of them. Jul 28, 2011 at 8:43
  • @T.J.Crowder. What would you recommend? jQuery uses the first style and Crockford uses the second.
    – Teej
    Feb 16, 2012 at 7:55
  • 4
    @ThorpeObazee: It genuinely doesn't matter, so do whatever you prefer. I'd recommend against some of the more outre ones (-function(){}();, !function(){}();, and basically any other operator just before function also work, but I'd stick to versions using parens). I see the first a lot more than I see the second, and it's my preference; it makes more sense to me as well, but that's subjective. FWIW: jsbin.com/ejaqow Feb 16, 2012 at 8:38
13

In that case it doesn't matter. You are invoking an expression that resolves to a function in the first definition, and defining and immediately invoking a function in the second example. They're similar because the function expression in the first example is just the function definition.

There are other more obviously useful cases for invoking expressions that resolve to functions:

(foo || bar)()
2
  • 3
    For clarification to other readers (mainly because I didn't understand it at first myself :) ), foo and/or bar must already equal some function. (e.g. foo = function(){alert('hi');}. If neither are a function, an error is thrown. Apr 12, 2012 at 18:53
  • 3
    @AlexanderBird A further clarification - It will also throw an error if foo is "truthy" but not a function.
    – JLRishe
    Aug 21, 2014 at 5:40
11

There isn't any difference beyond the syntax.

Regarding your concerns about the second method of doing it:

Consider:

(function namedfunc () { ... }())

namedfunc will still not be in the global scope even though you provided the name. The same goes for anonymous functions. The only way to get it in that scope would be to assign it to a variable inside the parens.

((namedfunc = function namedfunc () { ... })())

The outer parens are unnecessary:

(namedfunc = function namedfunc () { ... })()

But you didn't want that global declaration anyways, did you?

So it it boils down to:

(function namedfunc () { ... })()

And you can reduce it even further: the name is unnecessary since it will never be used (unless your function is recursive.. and even then you could use arguments.callee)

(function () { ... })()

That's the way I think about it (may be incorrect, I haven't read the ECMAScript specification yet). Hope it helps.

2
  • Note that arguments.callee is deprecated since ES5 (and forbidden in strict mode). Dec 26, 2018 at 15:36
  • "The outer parens are unnecessary:" - I think they prevent errors when files are concatenated, otherwise you'd need a ! or something.
    – Jimmyt1988
    Aug 12, 2019 at 9:37
-2

The difference just exist because Douglas Crockford doesn't like the first style for IIFEs! (seriuosly) As you can see in this video!!.

The only reason for the existence of the extra wrapping () {in both styles} is to help make that section of code Function Expression, because Function Declaration cannot be immediately called. Some scripts / minify-ers just use +, !, - & ~ instead of too parentheses. Like this:

+function() {  
    var foo = 'bar';  
}();

!function() {  
    var foo = 'bar';  
}();

-function() {  
    var foo = 'bar';  
}();

~function() {  
    var foo = 'bar';  
}();

And all these are exactly the same as your alternatives. Choosing among these cases is completely on your own & makes no difference. { The ones with () produce 1 Byte larger File ;-) }

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