When actually is a closure created?
- by Jian Lin
Is it true that a closure is created in the following cases for foo, but not for bar?
Case 1:
<script type="text/javascript">
function foo() { }
</script>
foo is a closure with a scope chain with only the global scope.
Case 2:
<script type="text/javascript">
var i = 1;
function foo() { return i; }
</script>
same as Case 1.
Case 3:
<script type="text/javascript">
function Circle(r) {
this.r = r;
}
Circle.prototype.foo = function() { return 3.1415 * this.r * this.r }
</script>
in this case, Circle.prototype.foo (which returns the circle's area) refers to a closure with only the global scope. (this closure is created).
Case 4:
<script type="text/javascript">
function foo() {
function bar() {
}
}
</script>
here, foo is a closure with only the global scope, but bar is not a closure (yet), because the function foo is not invoked in the code, so no closure goo is ever created. It will only exist if foo is invoked , and the closure bar will exist until foo returns, and the closure bar will then be garbage collected, since there is no reference to it at all anywhere.
So when the function doesn't exist, can't be invoked, can't be referenced, then the closure doesn't exist yet (never created yet). Only when the function can be invoked or can be referenced, then the closure is actually created?