Closures in JavaScript

Feb 25, 2016

JavaScript closures are a pretty essential concept to know if you’re a JS dev. But, sadly, if you were to ask the average junior developer what they are, more often than not you won’t get a solid answer. I’m writing this so that YOU can be the knowledge bomb-dropper in the room. Let’s do this.

Okay so the quick summary of a closure is that from an inner function, it gives you access to an outer function’s scope. So essentially, you can create private variables. In JavaScript. Whoa.

Moving backwards a bit, JS has both local and global variables. A local variable looks something like this (see magic):

function yolo() {
  var magic = 3.14;
  return magic;
}

And a global variable looks something like this (again, see magic):

var magic = 3.14;
function yolo() {
  return magic;
}

So global variables live forever (or as long as your window/website is open), and local variables are created when the function is invoked and deleted when the function has finished up. But if you have a variable that you want available to all of your functions, you might run into some security issues. Because if you use a global variable, it’s not only accessible to all of your functions in your JS, but it’s also available to any scripts that might be executed on your site.

There has to be a better way.

Oh wait, that’s the whole point of this blog post.

Closures!

Closures are the primary way to have data privacy in your JavaScript. A super duper basic example of this is a simple iterator, where every time you call iterate(), a counter is increased by 1.

function iterate() {
  var count = 0;
  return function () { return count += 1; };
}

So to run that function, you’d run the following lines and get the shown output:

> var x = iterate();
> x();
1
> x();
2
> x();
3

…and so forth. It looks a little funny, but it’s because iterate() has become a closure. It consists of the local variable count, and the returned function.

You’ll see a lot of closures if you do functional programming in JavaScript (and along the same lines, currying), and also a lot in event handlers, in callbacks, and also just when you’re coding or reading code in JS that involve data privacy. Definitely try messing with them if you haven’t yet. It’ll be super helpful for you in the long run.