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I noticed that in Internet Explorer (but, unfortunately, not in the other browsers I tested), you can use some Unicode variable names. This made my day, and I was absolutely delighted that I could write fun Unicode-laden code like this:

var ктоείναι草泥马 = "You dirty horse.",
    happy☺n☺mat☺p☺eia = ":)Yay!",
    ಠ_ಠ = "emoticon";

alert(ктоείναι草泥马 + happy☺n☺mat☺p☺eia + ಠ_ಠ);

For some reason, though, ◎ܫ◎, ♨_♨ and are not valid variable names.

Why do ಠ_ಠ and 草泥马 work, but not ◎ܫ◎, ♨_♨ or ?

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  • 5
    @JamWaffles You need to have a look at aaencode Sep 17, 2011 at 13:01
  • Does _☺ work? Also, perhaps you should try and work ;_; in there somewhere :) Sep 17, 2011 at 20:24
  • 3
    @JamWaffles I guess you could exploit weird characters to use as many 1-character identifiers as possible in a minifier. Although for 2-byte unicode characters you loose that advantage anyway.
    – aero
    Sep 18, 2011 at 8:36
  • 4
    @Cyrille You can, because is a unicode letter. Same with θ, π, λ, Σ and so on. Sep 20, 2011 at 17:07
  • 2
    I'd like to see Javascript and Java 9 use Math.π as an alias for Math.PI. I am not sure I'd go as far as to use the symbols used in the Scalaz library for Scala, but I think we should all be using Unicode web pages and source code files by now, and I would be happy with using mathematical symbols for mathematical concepts. Jun 27, 2013 at 2:20

4 Answers 4

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ಠ_ಠ and 草泥马 only contain "letters" used in actual alphabets; that is, ಠ is a symbol from the Kannada alphabet, and 草泥马 consists of Chinese characters.

◎ and ☺, however, are purely symbols; they are not associated with any alphabet.

The ECMAScript standard, chapter 7.6 (which all the browsers except Internet Explorer are following), states that an identifier must start with one of the following.

  • a Unicode letter
  • $ or _
  • \ followed by a unicode escape sequence.

The following characters of an identifier must be one of the following.

  • any of the characters permitted at the start
  • a Unicode combining mark
  • a Unicode digit
  • a Unicode connector punctuation
  • a zero-width-non-joiner
  • a zero-width joiner

IE goes beyond the standard and is permissive enough to allow some symbols, such as ☺.

There’s a tool that will tell you if any string that you enter is a valid JavaScript variable name according to ECMAScript 5.1 and Unicode 6.1.

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  • 117
    Wow, JS variables are allowed to include zero-width characters? This provides some scary obfuscation abilities... Thank goodness there's no Underhanded Javascript Contest. Sep 18, 2011 at 13:00
  • 3
    @David: The zero-width joiner and non-joiner characters are special in that they affect the rendering of adjacent characters in e.g. Arabic. For such scripts, they need to be present in order to ensure proper display of the intended text. Sep 18, 2011 at 13:34
  • 5
    Oh, I know what they're for. I guess the real question is whether ab and a<ZWNJ>b are different variable names or the same one. If they're different, that's very strange, and exploitable; if they're the same, then that makes sense, and the ZWNJ is indeed only a rendering hack rather than a meaningful part of the variable name. Sep 18, 2011 at 16:19
  • 16
    @Daniel Just tried this: var ab = 'ab'; a‌b = 'a<ZWNJ>b'; alert(ab); and it alerted ab with this warning: "Warning: assignment to undeclared variable ab". Since many pages are filled with warnings like that, it could likely go unnoticed, even by someone who was actually looking at the error console. I'm using Notepad++ with "Show all characters" mode on, and it's not showing the ZWNJ at all. I had to use a hex editor to put it in.
    – Tyler
    Sep 18, 2011 at 23:53
  • 5
    Looks like Stackoverflow edited out the actual ZWNJ characters from my comment, but I think you can see what I mean. I should have mentioned that I'm on Aurora, which (for those who aren't familiar with Mozilla's "channels") is a preview of what will be Firefox 8. Also, why did I not think to put this snippet on jsfiddle?
    – Tyler
    Sep 19, 2011 at 0:04
83

EcmaScript 262, section 7.6 says names must start with $, _, or a Unicode letter, and after that may contain either those characters, or Unicode combining marks, Unicode digits, or Unicode connector punctuation (and a couple of format-control characters that are language specific.)

So, the difference between allowed and not allowed identifiers in your cases is probably whether the leading character is considered a "letter".

5
  • 1
    So is a unicode letter but isn't? And even so, it doesn't seem to work in browsers other than IE, so I would imagine the ECMAScript standard wouldn't mean much in this case. Sep 17, 2011 at 0:14
  • I expect what we're seeing here is EcmaScript attempting to make the language more accessible to non-english speakers. I would expect to see support in other browsers emerge in due course.
    – broofa
    Sep 17, 2011 at 0:18
  • 16
    The offending character and it is a U+25CE BULLSEYE which is in Category So = Symbol, other, and hence indeed not a Unicode letter. What do you mean "it doesn't work in browsers other than IE?"
    – Ray Toal
    Sep 17, 2011 at 0:23
  • @Ray see the jsFiddle link in my question and the comment that goes along with it. Sep 17, 2011 at 0:25
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    I tried the fiddle, and thanks for posting it. The first variable is fine in Chrome, but the second is not, because it contains the happy face character U+263A. This is a symbol from category So, and Chrome is obeying the ECMAScript standard which prohibits these characters in identifiers. So your first comment to this answer is, I think, right on; IE is not obeying the standard if it lets that variable be declared.
    – Ray Toal
    Sep 17, 2011 at 0:32
53

To quote Valid JavaScript variable names, my write-up summarizing the relevant spec sections:

An identifier must start with $, _, or any character in the Unicode categories “Uppercase letter (Lu)”, “Lowercase letter (Ll)”, “Titlecase letter (Lt)”, “Modifier letter (Lm)”, “Other letter (Lo)”, or “Letter number (Nl)”.

The rest of the string can contain the same characters, plus any U+200C zero width non-joiner characters, U+200D zero width joiner characters, and characters in the Unicode categories “Non-spacing mark (Mn)”, “Spacing combining mark (Mc)”, “Decimal digit number (Nd)”, or “Connector punctuation (Pc)”.

I’ve also created a tool that will tell you if any string that you enter is a valid JavaScript variable name according to ECMAScript 5.1 and Unicode 6.3:

JavaScript variable name validator


P.S. If you were to summarize all these rules in a single ASCII-only regular expression for JavaScript, it would be over 9,000 characters long. Here it is:

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For object properties, you can use square-bracket syntax:

window["◎ܫ◎"] = true;
alert(window["◎ܫ◎"]); // alerts "true"
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  • 7
    Not quite the same thing. You can't declare a function-scoped variable this way; it only works for globals, as they're properties of the global object. I suppose if you really really wanted to, you could say var local = { '◎ܫ◎' => true, (other vars...) };...but it's probably not worth the trouble.
    – cHao
    Apr 12, 2013 at 15:22

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