I was reading typeahead.js documentation and found this code:
var states = ['Alabama', 'Alaska'];
//... more code
var states = new Bloodhound({
datumTokenizer: Bloodhound.tokenizers.obj.whitespace('value'),
queryTokenizer: Bloodhound.tokenizers.whitespace,
// `states` is an array of state names defined in "The Basics"
local: $.map(states, function(state) { return { value: state }; })
});
What I cannot understand is why Bloodhound
object uses states
array and it does not clash with the latter declaration of states
variable?
I know it shouldn't work unless it's nested. But is doesn't seem to be the case.
I did my own experiment:
var a = 3;
var a = function(){ alert(a + 2); }
a();
Output: function(){ alert(a + 2); }2
which proves that it's shouldn't work.
Is this one of those javascript peculiarities?
states
will be overwritten since they're in the same scope.