Function Expression Notation
JavaScript supports additional ways to define a function. This article describes the syntax for a "function expression". A function expression declares a variable and then assigns it to the function. That is, it is defined within the statement and does not need to be "called". Function expressions do not support hoisting.
Function expression
The function
keyword can be used to define a function inside an expression.
You can also define functions using the Function
constructor and a function declaration.
Expressions - function expression
const getRectArea = function(width, height) {
return width * height;
};
console.log(getRectArea(3, 4));
// expected output: 12
Syntax
The expression is not allowed at the start of a statement.
function [name]([param1[, param2[, ..., paramN]]]) {
statements
}
As of ES2015, you can also use arrow functions.
Parameters
name
OptionalparamN
OptionalThe name of an argument to be passed to the function.
statements
OptionalThe statements which comprise the body of the function.
Description
A function expression is very similar to and has almost the same syntax as a function declaration (see function
statement for details). The main difference between a function expression and a function declaration is the
function name, which can be omitted in function expressions to create
anonymous functions. A function expression can be used as an IIFE (Immediately Invoked Function Expression) which runs as soon as it is defined. See also the chapter about functions for more information.
Function expression hoisting
Function expressions in JavaScript are not hoisted, unlike function declarations. You can't use function expressions before you create them:
console.log(notHoisted) // undefined
// even though the variable name is hoisted, the definition isn't. so it's undefined.
notHoisted(); // TypeError: notHoisted is not a function
var notHoisted = function() {
console.log('bar');
};
Named function expression
If you want to refer to the current function inside the function body, you need to create a named function expression. This name is then local only to the
function body (scope). This also avoids using the non-standard
arguments.callee
property.
let math = {
'factit': function factorial(n) {
console.log(n)
if (n <= 1) {
return 1;
}
return n * factorial(n - 1);
}
};
math.factit(3) //3;2;1;
The variable the function expression is assigned to will have a name
property. The name doesn't change if it's assigned to a different variable. If function name is omitted, it will be the variable name (implicit name). If function name
is present, it will be the function name (explicit name). This also applies to
arrow functions
(arrows don't have a name so you can only give the variable an implicit name).
var foo = function() {}
foo.name // "foo"
var foo2 = foo
foo2.name // "foo"
var bar = function baz() {}
bar.name // "baz"
console.log(foo === foo2); // true
console.log(typeof baz); // undefined
console.log(bar === baz); // false (errors because baz == undefined)
Examples
Creating an unnamed function
The following example defines an unnamed function and assigns it to x
. The function returns the square of its argument:
var x = function(y) {
return y * y;
};
Using a function as a callback
More commonly it is used as a callback:
button.addEventListener('click', function(event) {
console.log('button is clicked!')
})
Using an Immediately Invoked Function Expression (IIFE)
An anonymous function is created and called:
(function() {
console.log('Code runs!')
})();
// or
!function() {
console.log('Code runs!')
}();
Source: Mozilla, https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/function
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