The Zen of Closures
Other people have mentioned closures. But it's surprising how many people know about closures, write code using closures, yet still have the wrong perception of what closures really are. Some people confuse first-class functions with closures. Yet others see it as a kind of static variable.
To me a closure is a kind of 'private' global variable. That is, a kind of variable that some functions see as global but other functions can't see. Now, I know this is playing fast and loose with the description of the underlying mechanism but that is how it feels like and behaves. To illustrate:
// Say you want three functions to share a single variable:
// Use a self-calling function to create scope:
(function(){
var counter = 0; // this is the variable we want to share;
// Declare global functions using function expressions:
increment = function(){
return ++counter;
}
decrement = function(){
return --counter;
}
value = function(){
return counter;
}
})()
now the three function increment
, decrement
and value
share the variable counter
without counter
being an actual global variable. This is the true nature of closures:
increment();
increment();
decrement();
alert(value()); // will output 1
The above is not a really useful use of closures. In fact, I'd say that using it this way is an anti-pattern. But it is useful in understanding the nature of closures. For example, most people get caught when they try to do something like the following:
for (var i=1;i<=10;i++) {
document.getElementById('span'+i).onclick = function () {
alert('this is span number '+i);
}
}
// ALL spans will generate alert: this span is span number 10
That's because they don't understand the nature of closures. They think that they are passing the value of i
into the functions when in fact the functions are sharing a single variable i
. Like I said before, a special kind of global variable.
To get around this you need detach* the closure:
function makeClickHandler (j) {
return function () {alert('this is span number '+j)};
}
for (var i=1;i<=10;i++) {
document.getElementById('span'+i).onclick = makeClickHandler(i);
}
// this works because i is passed by reference
// (or value in this case, since it is a number)
// instead of being captured by a closure
*note: I don't know the correct terminology here.