Search
 
SCRIPT & CODE EXAMPLE
 
CODE EXAMPLE FOR JAVASCRIPT

How do JavaScript closures work?

/*
A lexical environment is part of every execution context (stack frame) and is a map between identifiers (i.e. local variable names) and values.

Every function in JavaScript maintains a reference to its outer lexical environment. This reference is used to configure the execution context created when a function is invoked. 
This reference enables code inside the function to "see" variables declared outside the function, regardless of when and where the function is called.

If a function was called by a function, which in turn was called by another function, then a chain of references to outer lexical environments is created.
This chain is called the scope chain.

In the following code, inner forms a closure with the lexical environment of the execution context created when foo is invoked, closing over variable secret:
*/
function foo() {
  const secret = Math.trunc(Math.random() * 100)
  return function inner() {
    console.log(`The secret number is ${secret}.`)
  }
}
const f = foo() // `secret` is not directly accessible from outside `foo`
f() // The only way to retrieve `secret`, is to invoke `f`
 Run code snippet
Source by stackoverflow.com #
 
PREVIOUS NEXT
Tagged: #How #JavaScript #closures
ADD COMMENT
Topic
Name
8+2 =