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I understand that there is global scope, and additionally nestable functional scope. But are there any other types of scopes or closures in Javascript?

While we're on the topic, what's the difference between a scope, and a closure?

1 Answer 1

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A closure is a stack of visible scopes. Let's say you have the following code:

var v1;
function a() {
    var v2;
    function b() {
        var v3;
        function c() {
            var v4;
        }
        return c;
    }
    return b();
}
var f = a();

c is a function that has 4 visible scopes: its own scope (where v4 is defined), the b function's scope (where v3 is defined), the a function's scope (where v2 is defined), and the global scope (where v1 is defined). That stack of visible scopes is the closure, and the function is bound to that closure. When the reference to the c function is returned up the call chain, from b to a and finally assigned to f, it carries this closure binding with it, so when you invoke f(), it will have access to all those scopes, even though you're seemingly invoking a function in the global scope. As you see, there are only two kinds of scopes involved — the global scope and the function scope. The main difference is that variables in the global scope are defined as properties of the global object, while function scope vars are not properties of any object and cannot be referenced in any other way but by name. A closure is not a scope in itself, but a collection of scopes.

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  • are there other types of scopes but functions and window?
    – wwaawaw
    Sep 22, 2012 at 12:14
  • I've seen instance properties and inherited properties described as "scopes", but they really aren't. Those are the two actual variable scopes in JS.
    – lanzz
    Sep 22, 2012 at 15:47
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    postmessage serializes the passed object, and the serialization algorithm cannot serialize functions. Passing that object to iframeWin.postmessage will result in a DATA_CLONE_ERR exception.
    – lanzz
    Sep 29, 2012 at 12:06
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    This would define the function on the recipient's end. Closure binding happens on definition time, so the new function will have the scope visible at the point where it is defined on the recipient's end.
    – lanzz
    Sep 29, 2012 at 16:29
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    Yes, of course. eval-ing a string that holds code that defines a function will happily define the function, no matter where that string came from.
    – lanzz
    Sep 30, 2012 at 9:50

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