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I was reading the Scopes and Closure of You don't know JS book by Kyle Simpson, specifically this topic Compiler Speak.

There they mention the LHS and RHS lookup. I am failed to understand these two terms, can anyone help me to realize them?

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6 Answers 6

16

LHS look-up is done when a variable appears on the left-hand side of an assignment operation, and an RHS look-up is done when a variable appears on the right-hand side of an assignment operation.

I think of it as follows :
lhs lookup is a container lookup
rhs lookup is a value lookup

16

Don't think of it as a left hand side or right hand side assignment, think of it as storing the value into memory and retrieving it later.

For example when you type b in the chrome developer console, it starts the RHS lookup (retrieve the value of b) and if the value is not found, it throws ReferenceError.

In contrast when you type the b = 2 in chrome developer console, it starts LHS lookup, and if b is not found in the nested scope the JS compiler declares it in the global scope (depending on whether you are running code in strict mode or not).

For example take following code into consideration

function foo(a) {
    console.log( a + b)
}

foo( 2 );

When the JS compiler executes the code it first looks for the function foo and whether it is declared in the current scope (Hosting Environment Here) which is called RHS lookup. Now in the scope of foo the argument will be 2 and as we declared function foo(a) when we wrote foo( 2 ) we are implicitly assigning the value 2 to a or a = 2, which is called LHS lookup (assigning value 2 to a), now fast-forward the compiler will come to line console.log( a + b) again it will look for value a and b (again RHS lookup) and if the values are found it will assign it to console.log argument (if you assume that console.log is defined as console.log(arg1) in the hosting environment then arg1 = value of a+b (which is again LHS lookup).

In short:

• when the engine retrieves the value of a variable console.log(b), it gets the value from the memory location of b. This is a RHS lookup

• when the engine assigns the value to the variable b = 2, it looks for the value of b in the scope – if found, it sets the value 2 in the memory location of b, if not, it look in the upper level scope. This is a LHS lookup.

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  • There is also an RHS look-up for the console object. Then a property resolution occurs to see if it has a method called log.
    – asd123ea
    May 10, 2022 at 11:10
9

Simple example from the same book you have mentioned

function foo(a) {
console.log( a ); // 2
}
foo( 2 );

LHS : When you pass a value(2) to the foo method , compiler will assign to the parameter as a = 2 , is called LHS Lookup. It will simply find a container variable to assign the value.

RHS :In order to execute console.log to print a, need an RHS reference for the value of a. It's called RHS Lookup

Another Example

function foo(a) {
var b = a;
return a + b;
}
var c = foo( 2 );

3 LHS from the above example -**

  1. c = (container to hold the return of foo method)
  2. a = 2 (When you pass value 2 to the method, compiler will assign a = 2)
  3. b =

4 RHS from the above code snippet

  1. foo(2) - need a reference of a to get the value
  2. = a - to get the value of b , need a reference of a
  3. a - to get the value of a , need a reference of a
  4. b - to get the value of b , need a reference of b

Edit:

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  • I like this answer
    – Omar Hasan
    Jul 17, 2020 at 9:13
5

LHS - Look for an identifier for assigning purposes or for assigning a value to it.

let foo;

// It's looking for foo identifier in global scope and assign value
// So it's an LHS 
foo = 1; 

// It's also LHS as it assigning new value
foo = 2;

Now, RHS - it means when you're looking for an identifier to use it (not to assign value)

function foo() {
    alert(2);
}

// this look for an identifier called foo and 
// in global scope it's a function decoration 
// and execute it
foo();
4

I think of it as follows : lhs lookup is a container lookup rhs lookup is a value lookup

I like Kyle Simpson's approach a lot but this particular nutshell explanation brought home the point loud and clear to me.

There's always a trade between "just tell what I need to know, nothing more" and drilling down to understand better at a deep level.

Sometimes that deep understanding can help you keep out of trouble, how to debug, write test code, optimize and refactor.

I am currently reading and watching a lot of Kyle's writing and online teaching, he does have knack for explaining things well. A lot of instructors lose people along the way either by going too fast because the have expertise and it's hard for them to slow down - on the other hand if you get too basic the talk gets uninteresting and you just tune out.

2

Or short:

RHS - for read lookup

LHS - for write lookup

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