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What's the difference between using "let" and "var"?

ECMAScript 6 introduced the let statement.

I've heard that it's described as a local variable, but I'm still not quite sure how it behaves differently than the var keyword.

What are the differences? When should let be used instead of var?

ECMAScript is the standard and let is included in the 6th edition draft and will most likely be in the final specification.
See kangax.github.io/es5-compat-table/es6 for an up to date support matrix of ES6 features (including let). At the time of writing Firefox, Chrome and IE11 all support it (although I believe FF's implementation is not quite standard).
For the longest time I did not know that vars in a for loop were scoped to the function it was wrapped in. I remember figuring this out for the first time and thought it was very stupid. I do see some power though knowing now how the two could be used ffor different reason and how in some cases you might actually want to use a var in a for loop and not have it scoped to the block.
As ES6 feature support improves, the question concerning ES6 adoption shifts focus from feature support to performance differences. As such, here's a site I found benchmarking performance differences between ES6 and ES5. Keep in mind this will likely change over time as engines optimize for ES6 code.

3
38 revs, 28 users 27%

Scoping rules

The main difference is scoping rules. Variables declared by var keyword are scoped to the immediate function body (hence the function scope) while let variables are scoped to the immediate enclosing block denoted by { } (hence the block scope).

function run() { var foo = "Foo"; let bar = "Bar"; console.log(foo, bar); // Foo Bar { var moo = "Mooo" let baz = "Bazz"; console.log(moo, baz); // Mooo Bazz } console.log(moo); // Mooo console.log(baz); // ReferenceError } run();

The reason why let keyword was introduced to the language was function scope is confusing and was one of the main sources of bugs in JavaScript.

Take a look at this example from another Stack Overflow question:

var funcs = []; // let's create 3 functions for (var i = 0; i < 3; i++) { // and store them in funcs funcs[i] = function() { // each should log its value. console.log("My value: " + i); }; } for (var j = 0; j < 3; j++) { // and now let's run each one to see funcs[j](); }

My value: 3 was output to console each time funcs[j](); was invoked since anonymous functions were bound to the same variable.

People had to create immediately invoked functions to capture correct values from the loops but that was also hairy.

Hoisting

While variables declared with var keyword are hoisted (initialized with undefined before the code is run) which means they are accessible in their enclosing scope even before they are declared:

function run() { console.log(foo); // undefined var foo = "Foo"; console.log(foo); // Foo } run();

let variables are not initialized until their definition is evaluated. Accessing them before the initialization results in a ReferenceError. The variable is said to be in "temporal dead zone" from the start of the block until the initialization is processed.

function checkHoisting() { console.log(foo); // ReferenceError let foo = "Foo"; console.log(foo); // Foo } checkHoisting();

Creating global object property

At the top level, let, unlike var, does not create a property on the global object:

var foo = "Foo"; // globally scoped let bar = "Bar"; // not allowed to be globally scoped console.log(window.foo); // Foo console.log(window.bar); // undefined

Redeclaration

In strict mode, var will let you re-declare the same variable in the same scope while let raises a SyntaxError.

'use strict'; var foo = "foo1"; var foo = "foo2"; // No problem, 'foo1' is replaced with 'foo2'. let bar = "bar1"; let bar = "bar2"; // SyntaxError: Identifier 'bar' has already been declared


Remember you can create block whenever you want. function() { code;{ let inBlock = 5; } code; };
So is the purpose of let statements only to free up memory when not needed in a certain block?
@NoBugs, Yes, and it is encouraged that variables are existent only where they are needed.
let block expression let (variable declaration) statement is non-standard and will be removed in future, bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1023609.
let at the top level scope is not identical to var -- let explicitly will not create globally-scoped references: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…
N
Nash Bridges

let can also be used to avoid problems with closures. It binds fresh value rather than keeping an old reference as shown in examples below.

for(var i=1; i<6; i++) { $("#div" + i).click(function () { console.log(i); }); }

Clicking on each number will log to console:

1
2
3
4
5

Code above demonstrates a classic JavaScript closure problem. Reference to the i variable is being stored in the click handler closure, rather than the actual value of i.

Every single click handler will refer to the same object because there’s only one counter object which holds 6 so you get six on each click.

A general workaround is to wrap this in an anonymous function and pass i as an argument. Such issues can also be avoided now by using let instead var as shown in the code below.

(Tested in Chrome and Firefox 50)

for(let i=1; i<6; i++) { $("#div" + i).click(function () { console.log(i); }); }

Clicking on each number will log to console:

1
2
3
4
5


That is actually cool. I would expect "i" to be defined outside the loop body contains within brackets and to NOT form a "closure" around "i".Of course your example proves otherwise. I think it is a bit confusing from the syntax point of view but this scenario is so common it makes sense to support it in that way. Many thanks for bringing this up.
IE 11 supports let, but it alerts "6" for all the buttons. Do you have any source saying how let is supposed to behave?
Looks like your answer is the correct behavior: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…
Indeed this is a common pitfall in Javascript and now I can see why let would be really useful. Setting event listeners in a loop no longer requires an immediatelly invoked function expression for locally scoping i at each iteration.
The use of "let" just defers this problem. So each iteration creates a private independent block scope, but the "i" variable can still be corrupted by subsequent changes within the block, (granted the iterator variable is not usually changed within the block, but other declared let variables within the block may well be) and any function declared within the block can, when invoked, corrupt the value of "i" for other functions declared within the block because they do share the same private block scope hence the same reference to "i".
J
John Slegers

What's the difference between let and var?

A variable defined using a var statement is known throughout the function it is defined in, from the start of the function. (*)

A variable defined using a let statement is only known in the block it is defined in, from the moment it is defined onward. (**)

To understand the difference, consider the following code:

// i IS NOT known here
// j IS NOT known here
// k IS known here, but undefined
// l IS NOT known here

function loop(arr) {
    // i IS known here, but undefined
    // j IS NOT known here
    // k IS known here, but has a value only the second time loop is called
    // l IS NOT known here

    for( var i = 0; i < arr.length; i++ ) {
        // i IS known here, and has a value
        // j IS NOT known here
        // k IS known here, but has a value only the second time loop is called
        // l IS NOT known here
    };

    // i IS known here, and has a value
    // j IS NOT known here
    // k IS known here, but has a value only the second time loop is called
    // l IS NOT known here

    for( let j = 0; j < arr.length; j++ ) {
        // i IS known here, and has a value
        // j IS known here, and has a value
        // k IS known here, but has a value only the second time loop is called
        // l IS NOT known here
    };

    // i IS known here, and has a value
    // j IS NOT known here
    // k IS known here, but has a value only the second time loop is called
    // l IS NOT known here
}

loop([1,2,3,4]);

for( var k = 0; k < arr.length; k++ ) {
    // i IS NOT known here
    // j IS NOT known here
    // k IS known here, and has a value
    // l IS NOT known here
};

for( let l = 0; l < arr.length; l++ ) {
    // i IS NOT known here
    // j IS NOT known here
    // k IS known here, and has a value
    // l IS known here, and has a value
};

loop([1,2,3,4]);

// i IS NOT known here
// j IS NOT known here
// k IS known here, and has a value
// l IS NOT known here

Here, we can see that our variable j is only known in the first for loop, but not before and after. Yet, our variable i is known in the entire function.

Also, consider that block scoped variables are not known before they are declared because they are not hoisted. You're also not allowed to redeclare the same block scoped variable within the same block. This makes block scoped variables less error prone than globally or functionally scoped variables, which are hoisted and which do not produce any errors in case of multiple declarations.

Is it safe to use let today?

Some people would argue that in the future we'll ONLY use let statements and that var statements will become obsolete. JavaScript guru Kyle Simpson wrote a very elaborate article on why he believes that won't be the case.

Today, however, that is definitely not the case. In fact, we need actually to ask ourselves whether it's safe to use the let statement. The answer to that question depends on your environment:

If you're writing server-side JavaScript code (Node.js), you can safely use the let statement.

If you're writing client-side JavaScript code and use a browser based transpiler (like Traceur or babel-standalone), you can safely use the let statement, however your code is likely to be anything but optimal with respect to performance.

If you're writing client-side JavaScript code and use a Node based transpiler (like the traceur shell script or Babel), you can safely use the let statement. And because your browser will only know about the transpiled code, performance drawbacks should be limited.

If you're writing client-side JavaScript code and don't use a transpiler, you need to consider browser support. There are still some browsers that don't support let at all :

https://i.stack.imgur.com/J9kEC.png

How to keep track of browser support

For an up-to-date overview of which browsers support the let statement at the time of your reading this answer, see this Can I Use page.

(*) Globally and functionally scoped variables can be initialized and used before they are declared because JavaScript variables are hoisted. This means that declarations are always much to the top of the scope.

(**) Block scoped variables are not hoisted


regarding answer v4: i IS known everywhere in the function-block! It starts as undefined (due to hoisting) until you assign a value! ps: let is also hoisted (to the top of it's containing block), but will give a ReferenceError when referenced in the block before first assignment. (ps2: I'm a pro-semicolon kinda guy but you really don't need a semicolon after a block ). That being said, thanks for adding the reality-check regarding support!
@GitaarLAB : According to the Mozilla Developer Network : "In ECMAScript 2015, let bindings are not subject to Variable Hoisting, which means that let declarations do not move to the top of the current execution context." - Anyway, I made a few improvements to my answer that should clarify the difference in hoisting behavior between let and var!
Your answer improved a lot (I thoroughly checked). Note that same link you referenced in your comment also says: "The (let) variable is in a "temporal dead zone" from the start of the block until the initialization is processed." That means that the 'identifier' (the text-string 'reserved' to point to 'something') is already reserved in the relevant scope, otherwise it would become part of the root/host/window scope. To me personally, 'hoisting' means nothing more than reserving/linking declared 'identifiers' to their relevant scope; excluding their initialization/assignment/modifyability!
And..+1. That Kyle Simpson article you linked is an excellent read, thank you for that! It is also clear about the "temporal dead zone" aka "TDZ". One interesting thing I'd like to add: I've read on MDN that let and const were recommended to only use when you actually need their additional functionality, because enforcing/checking these extra features (like write-only const) result in 'more work' (and additional scope-nodes in the scope-tree) for the (current)engine(s) to enforce/check/verify/setup.
Note that MDN says that IE DOES interpret let correctly. Which is it? developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…
J
Jack Bashford

Here's an explanation of the let keyword with some examples.

let works very much like var. The main difference is that the scope of a var variable is the entire enclosing function

This table on Wikipedia shows which browsers support Javascript 1.7.

Note that only Mozilla and Chrome browsers support it. IE, Safari, and potentially others don't.


The key bit of text from the linked document seems to be, "let works very much like var. The main difference is that the scope of a var variable is the entire enclosing function".
@olliej, actually Mozilla is just ahead of the game. See page 19 of ecma-international.org/publications/files/ECMA-ST/Ecma-262.pdf
@TylerCrompton that's just the set of words that have been reserved for years. When mozilla added let it was purely a mozilla extension, with no related spec. ES6 should define behaviour for let statements, but that came after mozilla introduced the syntax. Remember moz also has E4X, which is entirely dead and moz only.
Now let support all latest browser today except Opera, Blackberry & QQ Browsers.
W
William

The accepted answer is missing a point:

{
  let a = 123;
};

console.log(a); // ReferenceError: a is not defined

The accepted answer does NOT explain this point in its example. The accepted answer only demonstrated it in a for loop initializer, dramatically narrowing the scope of application of the limitations of let. Upvoted.
@stimpy77 It explicitly states "let is scoped to the nearest enclosing block"; does every way that manifests need to be included?
there were a lot of examples and none of them properly demonstrated the matter .. I might've upvoted both the accepted answer and this one?
This contribution demonstrates that a "block" can simply be a set of lines enclosed in brackets; i.e. it doesn't need to be associated with any sort of control flow, loop, etc.
A
Abdul Rehman

let

Block scope

Variables declared using the let keyword are block-scoped, which means that they are available only in the block in which they were declared.

At the top level (outside of a function)

At the top level, variables declared using let don't create properties on the global object.

var globalVariable = 42;
let blockScopedVariable = 43;

console.log(globalVariable); // 42
console.log(blockScopedVariable); // 43

console.log(this.globalVariable); // 42
console.log(this.blockScopedVariable); // undefined

Inside a function

Inside a function (but outside of a block), let has the same scope as var.

(() => {
  var functionScopedVariable = 42;
  let blockScopedVariable = 43;

  console.log(functionScopedVariable); // 42
  console.log(blockScopedVariable); // 43
})();

console.log(functionScopedVariable); // ReferenceError: functionScopedVariable is not defined
console.log(blockScopedVariable); // ReferenceError: blockScopedVariable is not defined

Inside a block

Variables declared using let inside a block can't be accessed outside that block.

{
  var globalVariable = 42;
  let blockScopedVariable = 43;
  console.log(globalVariable); // 42
  console.log(blockScopedVariable); // 43
}

console.log(globalVariable); // 42
console.log(blockScopedVariable); // ReferenceError: blockScopedVariable is not defined

Inside a loop

Variables declared with let in loops can be referenced only inside that loop.

for (var i = 0; i < 3; i++) {
  var j = i * 2;
}
console.log(i); // 3
console.log(j); // 4

for (let k = 0; k < 3; k++) {
  let l = k * 2;
}
console.log(typeof k); // undefined
console.log(typeof l); // undefined
// Trying to do console.log(k) or console.log(l) here would throw a ReferenceError.

Loops with closures

If you use let instead of var in a loop, with each iteration you get a new variable. That means that you can safely use a closure inside a loop.

// Logs 3 thrice, not what we meant.
for (var i = 0; i < 3; i++) {
  setTimeout(() => console.log(i), 0);
}

// Logs 0, 1 and 2, as expected.
for (let j = 0; j < 3; j++) {
  setTimeout(() => console.log(j), 0);
}

Temporal dead zone

Because of the temporal dead zone, variables declared using let can't be accessed before they are declared. Attempting to do so throws an error.

console.log(noTDZ); // undefined
var noTDZ = 43;
console.log(hasTDZ); // ReferenceError: hasTDZ is not defined
let hasTDZ = 42;

No re-declaring

You can't declare the same variable multiple times using let. You also can't declare a variable using let with the same identifier as another variable which was declared using var.

var a;
var a; // Works fine.

let b;
let b; // SyntaxError: Identifier 'b' has already been declared

var c;
let c; // SyntaxError: Identifier 'c' has already been declared

const

const is quite similar to let—it's block-scoped and has TDZ. There are, however, two things which are different.

No re-assigning

Variable declared using const can't be re-assigned.

const a = 42;
a = 43; // TypeError: Assignment to constant variable.

Note that it doesn't mean that the value is immutable. Its properties still can be changed.

const obj = {};
obj.a = 42;
console.log(obj.a); // 42

If you want to have an immutable object, you should use Object.freeze().

const obj = Object.freeze({a: 40});
obj.a = 42;
console.log(obj.a); // 40
console.log(obj.b); // undefined

Initializer is required

You always must specify a value when declaring a variable using const.

const a; // SyntaxError: Missing initializer in const declaration

H
Hasan Sefa Ozalp

In most basic terms,

for (let i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
  // i accessible ✔️
}
// i not accessible ❌

for (var i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
  // i accessible ✔️
}
// i accessible ✔️

⚡️ Sandbox to play around ↓

https://codesandbox.io/static/img/play-codesandbox.svg


v
vlio20

https://i.stack.imgur.com/dqNYW.png

As you can see the var j variable is still having a value outside of the for loop scope (Block Scope), but the let i variable is undefined outside of the for loop scope.

"use strict"; console.log("var:"); for (var j = 0; j < 2; j++) { console.log(j); } console.log(j); console.log("let:"); for (let i = 0; i < 2; i++) { console.log(i); } console.log(i);


A
Alireza

The main difference is the scope difference, while let can be only available inside the scope it's declared, like in for loop, var can be accessed outside the loop for example. From the documentation in MDN (examples also from MDN):

let allows you to declare variables that are limited in scope to the block, statement, or expression on which it is used. This is unlike the var keyword, which defines a variable globally, or locally to an entire function regardless of block scope. Variables declared by let have as their scope the block in which they are defined, as well as in any contained sub-blocks. In this way, let works very much like var. The main difference is that the scope of a var variable is the entire enclosing function:

function varTest() {
  var x = 1;
  if (true) {
    var x = 2;  // same variable!
    console.log(x);  // 2
  }
  console.log(x);  // 2
}

function letTest() {
  let x = 1;
  if (true) {
    let x = 2;  // different variable
    console.log(x);  // 2
  }
  console.log(x);  // 1
}`

At the top level of programs and functions, let, unlike var, does not create a property on the global object. For example:

var x = 'global';
let y = 'global';
console.log(this.x); // "global"
console.log(this.y); // undefined

When used inside a block, let limits the variable's scope to that block. Note the difference between var whose scope is inside the function where it is declared.

var a = 1;
var b = 2;

if (a === 1) {
  var a = 11; // the scope is global
  let b = 22; // the scope is inside the if-block

  console.log(a);  // 11
  console.log(b);  // 22
} 

console.log(a); // 11
console.log(b); // 2

Also don't forget it's ECMA6 feature, so it's not fully supported yet, so it's better always transpiles it to ECMA5 using Babel etc... for more info about visit babel website


I don't know if that last example is accurate. Because by calling it not from a function but a direct command line its still considered part of the same function. So, if you called it from outside of a function, it shouldn't behave in the same way.
J
Jack Bashford

There are some subtle differences — let scoping behaves more like variable scoping does in more or less any other languages.

e.g. It scopes to the enclosing block, They don't exist before they're declared, etc.

However it's worth noting that let is only a part of newer Javascript implementations and has varying degrees of browser support.


It's also worth noting that ECMAScript is the standard and let is included in the 6th edition draft and will most likely be in the final specification.
Just stubled across this question and in 2012 it is still the case that only Mozilla browsers support let. Safari, IE, and Chome all don't.
The idea of accidentally creating partial block scope on accident is a good point, beware, let does not hoist, to use a variable defined by a let defined at the top of your block. If you have an if statement that is more than just a few lines of code, you may forget that you cannot use that variable until after it is defined. GREAT POINT!!!
This is one of the most important distinctions between let and var and it's not in the accepted answer haha. Especially considering the numerous bugs that can occur thanks to hoisting and scoping. I feel like there aren't many differences between let and var if you don't mention hoisting.
@EricB: yes and no: "In ECMAScript 2015, let will hoist the variable to the top of the block. However, referencing the variable in the block before the variable declaration results in a ReferenceError (my note: instead of good old undefined). The variable is in a 'temporal dead zone' from the start of the block until the declaration is processed." Same goes for "switch statements because there is only one underlying block". Source: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…
C
Community

Variable Not Hoisting let will not hoist to the entire scope of the block they appear in. By contrast, var could hoist as below. { console.log(cc); // undefined. Caused by hoisting var cc = 23; } { console.log(bb); // ReferenceError: bb is not defined let bb = 23; } Actually, Per @Bergi, Both var and let are hoisted.

Garbage Collection Block scope of let is useful relates to closures and garbage collection to reclaim memory. Consider, function process(data) { //... } var hugeData = { .. }; process(hugeData); var btn = document.getElementById("mybutton"); btn.addEventListener( "click", function click(evt){ //.... }); The click handler callback does not need the hugeData variable at all. Theoretically, after process(..) runs, the huge data structure hugeData could be garbage collected. However, it's possible that some JS engine will still have to keep this huge structure, since the click function has a closure over the entire scope. However, the block scope can make this huge data structure to garbage collected. function process(data) { //... } { // anything declared inside this block can be garbage collected let hugeData = { .. }; process(hugeData); } var btn = document.getElementById("mybutton"); btn.addEventListener( "click", function click(evt){ //.... });

let loops let in the loop can re-binds it to each iteration of the loop, making sure to re-assign it the value from the end of the previous loop iteration. Consider, // print '5' 5 times for (var i = 0; i < 5; ++i) { setTimeout(function () { console.log(i); }, 1000); } However, replace var with let // print 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. now for (let i = 0; i < 5; ++i) { setTimeout(function () { console.log(i); }, 1000); } Because let create a new lexical environment with those names for a) the initialiser expression b) each iteration (previosly to evaluating the increment expression), more details are here.


Yip they are hoisted, but behave as if not hoisted because of the (drum roll) Temporal Dead Zone - a very dramatic name for an identifier not being accessible until it's declared:-)
So let is hoisted, but unavailable? How is that different than 'not hoisted'?
Hopefully Brian or Bergi come back to answer this. Is the declaration of let hoisted, but not the assignment? Thanks!
It's interesting it is even called hoisting when it comes to let. I get that technically the parsing engine is pre-capturing it, but for all intents and purposes a programmer should treat it as if it doesn't exist. The hoisting of var on the other hand has implications to a programmer.
m
mormegil

The difference is in the scope of the variables declared with each.

In practice, there are a number of useful consequences of the difference in scope:

let variables are only visible in their nearest enclosing block ({ ... }). let variables are only usable in lines of code that occur after the variable is declared (even though they are hoisted!). let variables may not be redeclared by a subsequent var or let. Global let variables are not added to the global window object. let variables are easy to use with closures (they do not cause race conditions).

The restrictions imposed by let reduce the visibility of the variables and increase the likelihood that unexpected name collisions will be found early. This makes it easier to track and reason about variables, including their reachability(helping with reclaiming unused memory).

Consequently, let variables are less likely to cause problems when used in large programs or when independently-developed frameworks are combined in new and unexpected ways.

var may still be useful if you are sure you want the single-binding effect when using a closure in a loop (#5) or for declaring externally-visible global variables in your code (#4). Use of var for exports may be supplanted if export migrates out of transpiler space and into the core language.

Examples

1. No use outside nearest enclosing block: This block of code will throw a reference error because the second use of x occurs outside of the block where it is declared with let:

{
    let x = 1;
}
console.log(`x is ${x}`);  // ReferenceError during parsing: "x is not defined".

In contrast, the same example with var works.

2. No use before declaration:
This block of code will throw a ReferenceError before the code can be run because x is used before it is declared:

{
    x = x + 1;  // ReferenceError during parsing: "x is not defined".
    let x;
    console.log(`x is ${x}`);  // Never runs.
}

In contrast, the same example with var parses and runs without throwing any exceptions.

3. No redeclaration: The following code demonstrates that a variable declared with let may not be redeclared later:

let x = 1;
let x = 2;  // SyntaxError: Identifier 'x' has already been declared

4. Globals not attached to window:

var button = "I cause accidents because my name is too common.";
let link = "Though my name is common, I am harder to access from other JS files.";
console.log(link);  // OK
console.log(window.link);  // undefined (GOOD!)
console.log(window.button);  // OK

5. Easy use with closures: Variables declared with var do not work well with closures inside loops. Here is a simple loop that outputs the sequence of values that the variable i has at different points in time:

for (let i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
    console.log(`i is ${i}`), 125/*ms*/);
}

Specifically, this outputs:

i is 0
i is 1
i is 2
i is 3
i is 4

In JavaScript we often use variables at a significantly later time than when they are created. When we demonstrate this by delaying the output with a closure passed to setTimeout:

for (let i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
    setTimeout(_ => console.log(`i is ${i}`), 125/*ms*/);
}

... the output remains unchanged as long as we stick with let. In contrast, if we had used var i instead:

for (var i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
    setTimeout(_ => console.log(`i is ${i}`), 125/*ms*/);
}

... the loop unexpectedly outputs "i is 5" five times:

i is 5
i is 5
i is 5
i is 5
i is 5

#5 is not caused by a race condition. By using var instead of let, the code is equivalent to: var i = 0; while (i < 5) { doSomethingLater(); i++; } i is outside the closure, and by the time that doSomethingLater() is executed, i has already been incremented 5 times, hence the output is i is 5 five times. By using let, the variable i is within the closure, so each async call gets its own copy of i instead of using the 'global' one that's created with var.
@DanielT.: I don't think the transformation of lifting the variable definition out of the loop initializer explains anything. That is simply the normal definition of the semantics of for. A more accurate transformation, though more complicated, is the classical for (var i = 0; i < 5; i++) { (function(j) { setTimeout(_ => console.log(i is ${j}), 125/*ms*/); })(i); } which introduces a "function-activation record" to save each value of i with the name of j inside the function.
a
abroz

Here's an example to add on to what others have already written. Suppose you want to make an array of functions, adderFunctions, where each function takes a single Number argument and returns the sum of the argument and the function's index in the array. Trying to generate adderFunctions with a loop using the var keyword won't work the way someone might naïvely expect:

// An array of adder functions.
var adderFunctions = [];

for (var i = 0; i < 1000; i++) {
  // We want the function at index i to add the index to its argument.
  adderFunctions[i] = function(x) {
    // What is i bound to here?
    return x + i;
  };
}

var add12 = adderFunctions[12];

// Uh oh. The function is bound to i in the outer scope, which is currently 1000.
console.log(add12(8) === 20); // => false
console.log(add12(8) === 1008); // => true
console.log(i); // => 1000

// It gets worse.
i = -8;
console.log(add12(8) === 0); // => true

The process above doesn't generate the desired array of functions because i's scope extends beyond the iteration of the for block in which each function was created. Instead, at the end of the loop, the i in each function's closure refers to i's value at the end of the loop (1000) for every anonymous function in adderFunctions. This isn't what we wanted at all: we now have an array of 1000 different functions in memory with exactly the same behavior. And if we subsequently update the value of i, the mutation will affect all the adderFunctions.

However, we can try again using the let keyword:

// Let's try this again.
// NOTE: We're using another ES6 keyword, const, for values that won't
// be reassigned. const and let have similar scoping behavior.
const adderFunctions = [];

for (let i = 0; i < 1000; i++) {
  // NOTE: We're using the newer arrow function syntax this time, but 
  // using the "function(x) { ..." syntax from the previous example 
  // here would not change the behavior shown.
  adderFunctions[i] = x => x + i;
}

const add12 = adderFunctions[12];

// Yay! The behavior is as expected. 
console.log(add12(8) === 20); // => true

// i's scope doesn't extend outside the for loop.
console.log(i); // => ReferenceError: i is not defined

This time, i is rebound on each iteration of the for loop. Each function now keeps the value of i at the time of the function's creation, and adderFunctions behaves as expected.

Now, image mixing the two behaviors and you'll probably see why it's not recommended to mix the newer let and const with the older var in the same script. Doing so can result is some spectacularly confusing code.

const doubleAdderFunctions = [];

for (var i = 0; i < 1000; i++) {
    const j = i;
    doubleAdderFunctions[i] = x => x + i + j;
}

const add18 = doubleAdderFunctions[9];
const add24 = doubleAdderFunctions[12];

// It's not fun debugging situations like this, especially when the
// code is more complex than in this example.
console.log(add18(24) === 42); // => false
console.log(add24(18) === 42); // => false
console.log(add18(24) === add24(18)); // => false
console.log(add18(24) === 2018); // => false
console.log(add24(18) === 2018); // => false
console.log(add18(24) === 1033); // => true
console.log(add24(18) === 1030); // => true

Don't let this happen to you. Use a linter.

NOTE: This is a teaching example intended to demonstrate the var/let behavior in loops and with function closures that would also be easy to understand. This would be a terrible way to add numbers. But the general technique of capturing data in anonymous function closures might be encountered in the real world in other contexts. YMMV.


@aborz: Also very cool anonymous function syntax in the second example. It's just what I'm used to in C#. I've learned something today.
Correction: Technically, Arrow function syntax described here => developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…
Actually, you don't need let value = i;. The for statement creates a lexical block.
P
Peter Mortensen

May the following two functions show the difference:

function varTest() {
    var x = 31;
    if (true) {
        var x = 71;  // Same variable!
        console.log(x);  // 71
    }
    console.log(x);  // 71
}

function letTest() {
    let x = 31;
    if (true) {
        let x = 71;  // Different variable
        console.log(x);  // 71
    }
    console.log(x);  // 31
}

T
TylerH

ES6 introduced two new keyword(let and const) alternate to var.

When you need a block level deceleration you can go with let and const instead of var.

The below table summarize the difference between var, let and const

https://i.stack.imgur.com/GBn5a.jpg


The hoisted column is incorrect. They all hoist variable. The difference with var is that they hoist but do not initialize to the undefined value. If they did not hoist, they would not mask variables of the same name in enclosing blocks: stackoverflow.com/q/63337235/2326961
S
Suraj Rao

Function VS block scope:

The main difference between var and let is that variables declared with var are function scoped. Whereas functions declared with let are block scoped. For example:

function testVar () {
  if(true) {
    var foo = 'foo';
  }

  console.log(foo);
}

testVar();  
// logs 'foo'


function testLet () {
  if(true) {
    let bar = 'bar';
  }

  console.log(bar);
}

testLet(); 
// reference error
// bar is scoped to the block of the if statement 

variables with var:

When the first function testVar gets called the variable foo, declared with var, is still accessible outside the if statement. This variable foo would be available everywhere within the scope of the testVar function.

variables with let:

When the second function testLet gets called the variable bar, declared with let, is only accessible inside the if statement. Because variables declared with let are block scoped (where a block is the code between curly brackets e.g if{} , for{}, function{}).

let variables don't get hoisted:

Another difference between var and let is variables with declared with let don't get hoisted. An example is the best way to illustrate this behavior:

variables with let don't get hoisted:

console.log(letVar);

let letVar = 10;
// referenceError, the variable doesn't get hoisted

variables with var do get hoisted:

console.log(varVar);

var varVar = 10;
// logs undefined, the variable gets hoisted

Global let doesn't get attached to window:

A variable declared with let in the global scope (which is code that is not in a function) doesn't get added as a property on the global window object. For example (this code is in global scope):

var bar = 5;
let foo  = 10;

console.log(bar); // logs 5
console.log(foo); // logs 10

console.log(window.bar);  
// logs 5, variable added to window object

console.log(window.foo);
// logs undefined, variable not added to window object

When should let be used over var?

Use let over var whenever you can because it is simply scoped more specific. This reduces potential naming conflicts which can occur when dealing with a large number of variables. var can be used when you want a global variable explicitly to be on the window object (always consider carefully if this is really necessary).


P
Peter Mortensen

let is interesting, because it allows us to do something like this:

(() => {
    var count = 0;

    for (let i = 0; i < 2; ++i) {
        for (let i = 0; i < 2; ++i) {
            for (let i = 0; i < 2; ++i) {
                console.log(count++);
            }
        }
    }
})();

Which results in counting [0, 7].

Whereas

(() => {
    var count = 0;

    for (var i = 0; i < 2; ++i) {
        for (var i = 0; i < 2; ++i) {
            for (var i = 0; i < 2; ++i) {
                console.log(count++);
            }
        }
    }
})();

Only counts [0, 1].


yes, it adds much more confusion than necessary and where there should be none.
@Bekim Bacaj This is a contrived example illustrating a distinction between let and var. That is, at the end of the loop, the variable declared by let goes out of scope, whereas var remains. It is up to the programmer to decide which constructs they opt to incorporate into their code, based on their intent, and prior experience. The intent of this example is not to cause confusion, but to give the reader a starting point to play with the let construct in creative ways to familiarize themselves with it.
J
John Slegers

It also appears that, at least in Visual Studio 2015, TypeScript 1.5, "var" allows multiple declarations of the same variable name in a block, and "let" doesn't.

This won't generate a compile error:

var x = 1;
var x = 2;

This will:

let x = 1;
let x = 2;

R
Ran Turner

This explanation was taken from an article I wrote at Medium:

Hoisting is a JavaScript mechanism where variables and function declarations are moved to the top of their scope by the parser which reads the source code into an intermediate representation before the actual code execution starts by the JavaScript interpreter. So, it actually doesn’t matter where variables or functions are declared, they will be moved to the top of their scope regardless of whether their scope is global or local. This means that console.log (hi); var hi = "say hi"; is actually interpreted to var hi = undefined; console.log (hi); hi = "say hi"; So, as we saw just now, var variables are being hoisted to the top of their scope and are being initialized with the value of undefined which means that we can actually assign their value before actually declaring them in the code like so: hi = “say hi” console.log (hi); // say hi var hi; Regarding function declarations, we can invoke them before actually declaring them like so: sayHi(); // Hi function sayHi() { console.log('Hi'); }; Function expressions, on the other hand, are not hoisted, so we’ll get the following error: sayHi(); //Output: "TypeError: sayHi is not a function var sayHi = function() { console.log('Hi'); }; ES6 introduced JavaScript developers the let and const keywords. While let and const are block-scoped and not function scoped as var it shouldn’t make a difference while discussing their hoisting behavior. We’ll start from the end, JavaScript hoists let and const. console.log(hi); // Output: Cannot access 'hi' before initialization let hi = 'Hi'; As we can see above, let doesn’t allow us to use undeclared variables, hence the interpreter explicitly output a reference error indicating that the hi variable cannot be accessed before initialization. The same error will occur if we change the above let to const console.log(hi); // Output: Cannot access 'hi' before initialization const hi = 'Hi'; So, bottom line, the JavaScript parser searches for variable declarations and functions and hoists them to the top of their scope before code execution and assign values to them in the memory so in case the interpreter will encounter them while executing the code he will recognize them and will be able to execute the code with their assigned values. Variables declared with let or const remain uninitialized at the beginning of execution while that variables declared with var are being initialized with a value of undefined. I added this visual illustration to help understanding of how are the hoisted variables and function are being saved in the memory


Proper attribution for quoted content is required on Stack Overflow. This includes explicit disclosure of affiliation and clearly displaying when content is copied from another location... even if you are the author.
M
Moslem Shahsavan

var is global scope (hoist-able) variable.

let and const is block scope.

test.js

{ let l = 'let'; const c = 'const'; var v = 'var'; v2 = 'var 2'; } console.log(v, this.v); console.log(v2, this.v2); console.log(l); // ReferenceError: l is not defined console.log(c); // ReferenceError: c is not defined


A
Ankur Soni

When Using let

The let keyword attaches the variable declaration to the scope of whatever block (commonly a { .. } pair) it's contained in. In other words,let implicitly hijacks any block's scope for its variable declaration.

let variables cannot be accessed in the window object because they cannot be globally accessed.

function a(){
    { // this is the Max Scope for let variable
        let x = 12;
    }
    console.log(x);
}
a(); // Uncaught ReferenceError: x is not defined

When Using var

var and variables in ES5 has scopes in functions meaning the variables are valid within the function and not outside the function itself.

var variables can be accessed in the window object because they cannot be globally accessed.

function a(){ // this is the Max Scope for var variable
    { 
        var x = 12;
    }
    console.log(x);
}
a(); // 12

If you want to know more continue reading below

one of the most famous interview questions on scope also can suffice the exact use of let and var as below;

When using let

for (let i = 0; i < 10 ; i++) {
    setTimeout(
        function a() {
            console.log(i); //print 0 to 9, that is literally AWW!!!
        }, 
        100 * i);
}

This is because when using let, for every loop iteration the variable is scoped and has its own copy.

When using var

for (var i = 0; i < 10 ; i++) {
    setTimeout(
        function a() {
            console.log(i); //print 10 times 10
        }, 
        100 * i);
}

This is because when using var, for every loop iteration the variable is scoped and has shared copy.


D
Daniel Sokolowski

If I read the specs right then let thankfully can also be leveraged to avoid self invoking functions used to simulate private only members - a popular design pattern that decreases code readability, complicates debugging, that adds no real code protection or other benefit - except maybe satisfying someone's desire for semantics, so stop using it. /rant

var SomeConstructor;

{
    let privateScope = {};

    SomeConstructor = function SomeConstructor () {
        this.someProperty = "foo";
        privateScope.hiddenProperty = "bar";
    }

    SomeConstructor.prototype.showPublic = function () {
        console.log(this.someProperty); // foo
    }

    SomeConstructor.prototype.showPrivate = function () {
        console.log(privateScope.hiddenProperty); // bar
    }

}

var myInstance = new SomeConstructor();

myInstance.showPublic();
myInstance.showPrivate();

console.log(privateScope.hiddenProperty); // error

See 'Emulating private interfaces'


Can you elaborate on how Immediately Invoked Function Expressions do not provide “code protection” and let does? (I assume you mean IIFE with “self invoking function”.)
And why do you set hiddenProperty in the constructor? There is only one hiddenProperty for all instances in your “class”.
P
Peter Mortensen

Some hacks with let:

1.

    let statistics = [16, 170, 10];
    let [age, height, grade] = statistics;

    console.log(height)

2.

    let x = 120,
    y = 12;
    [x, y] = [y, x];
    console.log(`x: ${x} y: ${y}`);

3.

    let node = {
                   type: "Identifier",
                   name: "foo"
               };

    let { type, name, value } = node;

    console.log(type);      // "Identifier"
    console.log(name);      // "foo"
    console.log(value);     // undefined

    let node = {
        type: "Identifier"
    };

    let { type: localType, name: localName = "bar" } = node;

    console.log(localType);     // "Identifier"
    console.log(localName);     // "bar"

Getter and setter with let:

let jar = {
    numberOfCookies: 10,
    get cookies() {
        return this.numberOfCookies;
    },
    set cookies(value) {
        this.numberOfCookies = value;
    }
};

console.log(jar.cookies)
jar.cookies = 7;

console.log(jar.cookies)

please what do this mean let { type, name, value } = node; ? you create a new object with 3 properties type/name/value and initialise them with the properties values from node ?
In example 3 you are re-declaring node which cause exception. These all examples also work perfectly with var too.
This doesn't answer the question; it could benefit from an explanation as to what each block of code is doing.
P
Piklu Dey

The below shows how 'let' and 'var' are different in the scope:

let gfoo = 123;
if (true) {
    let gfoo = 456;
}
console.log(gfoo); // 123

var hfoo = 123;
if (true) {
    var hfoo = 456;
}
console.log(hfoo); // 456

The gfoo, defined by let initially is in the global scope, and when we declare gfoo again inside the if clause its scope changed and when a new value is assigned to the variable inside that scope it does not affect the global scope.

Whereas hfoo, defined by var is initially in the global scope, but again when we declare it inside the if clause, it considers the global scope hfoo, although var has been used again to declare it. And when we re-assign its value we see that the global scope hfoo is also affected. This is the primary difference.


A
Ashish Kamble

I just came across one use case that I had to use var over let to introduce new variable. Here's a case:

I want to create a new variable with dynamic variable names.

let variableName = 'a';
eval("let " + variableName + '= 10;');
console.log(a);   // this doesn't work
var variableName = 'a';
eval("var " + variableName + '= 10;');
console.log(a);   // this works

The above code doesn't work because eval introduces a new block of code. The declaration using var will declare a variable outside of this block of code since var declares a variable in the function scope.

let, on the other hand, declares a variable in a block scope. So, a variable will only be visible in eval block.


When will you ever have to create a dynamic variable name, and have to access it later? It is so much better to create an object and assign keys and values to it.
In fact, that's because the re-declaration of a JavaScript let proposition is not allowed.
V
Vipul Jain

let is a part of es6. These functions will explain the difference in easy way.

function varTest() {
  var x = 1;
  if (true) {
    var x = 2;  // same variable!
    console.log(x);  // 2
  }
  console.log(x);  // 2
}

function letTest() {
  let x = 1;
  if (true) {
    let x = 2;  // different variable
    console.log(x);  // 2
  }
  console.log(x);  // 1
}

d
daCoda

let vs var. It's all about scope.

var variables are global and can be accessed basically everywhere, while let variables are not global and only exist until a closing parenthesis kills them.

See my example below, and note how the lion (let) variable acts differently in the two console.logs; it becomes out of scope in the 2nd console.log.

var cat = "cat";
let dog = "dog";

var animals = () => {
    var giraffe = "giraffe";
    let lion = "lion";

    console.log(cat);  //will print 'cat'.
    console.log(dog);  //will print 'dog', because dog was declared outside this function (like var cat).

    console.log(giraffe); //will print 'giraffe'.
    console.log(lion); //will print 'lion', as lion is within scope.
}

console.log(giraffe); //will print 'giraffe', as giraffe is a global variable (var).
console.log(lion); //will print UNDEFINED, as lion is a 'let' variable and is now out of scope.

N
N Randhawa

As mentioned above:

The difference is scoping. var is scoped to the nearest function block and let is scoped to the nearest enclosing block, which can be smaller than a function block. Both are global if outside any block.Lets see an example:

Example1:

In my both examples I have a function myfunc. myfunc contains a variable myvar equals to 10. In my first example I check if myvar equals to 10 (myvar==10) . If yes, I agian declare a variable myvar (now I have two myvar variables)using var keyword and assign it a new value (20). In next line I print its value on my console. After the conditional block I again print the value of myvar on my console. If you look at the output of myfunc, myvar has value equals to 20.

https://i.stack.imgur.com/sWpnR.png

Example2: In my second example instead of using var keyword in my conditional block I declare myvar using let keyword . Now when I call myfunc I get two different outputs: myvar=20 and myvar=10.

So the difference is very simple i.e its scope.


Please don't post pictures of code, it's considered bad practice on SO as it will not be searchable for future users (as well as accessibility concerns). As well, this answer adds nothing that other answers haven't already addressed.
P
Peter Mortensen

Now I think there is better scoping of variables to a block of statements using let:

function printnums()
{
    // i is not accessible here
    for(let i = 0; i <10; i+=)
    {
       console.log(i);
    }
    // i is not accessible here

    // j is accessible here
    for(var j = 0; j <10; j++)
    {
       console.log(j);
    }
    // j is accessible here
}

I think people will start using let here after so that they will have similar scoping in JavaScript like other languages, Java, C#, etc.

People with not a clear understanding about scoping in JavaScript used to make the mistake earlier.

Hoisting is not supported using let.

With this approach errors present in JavaScript are getting removed.

Refer to ES6 In Depth: let and const to understand it better.


D
Daniel Viglione

I want to link these keywords to the Execution Context, because the Execution Context is important in all of this. The Execution Context has two phases: a Creation Phase and Execution Phase. In addition, each Execution Context has a Variable Environment and Outer Environment (its Lexical Environment).

During the Creation Phase of an Execution Context, var, let and const will still store its variable in memory with an undefined value in the Variable Environment of the given Execution Context. The difference is in the Execution Phase. If you use reference a variable defined with var before it is assigned a value, it will just be undefined. No exception will be raised.

However, you cannot reference the variable declared with let or const until it is declared. If you try to use it before it is declared, then an exception will be raised during the Execution Phase of the Execution Context. Now the variable will still be in memory, courtesy of the Creation Phase of the Execution Context, but the Engine will not allow you to use it:

function a(){
    b;
    let b;
}
a();
> Uncaught ReferenceError: b is not defined

With a variable defined with var, if the Engine cannot find the variable in the current Execution Context's Variable Environment, then it will go up the scope chain (the Outer Environment) and check the Outer Environment's Variable Environment for the variable. If it cannot find it there, it will continue searching the Scope Chain. This is not the case with let and const.

The second feature of let is it introduces block scope. Blocks are defined by curly braces. Examples include function blocks, if blocks, for blocks, etc. When you declare a variable with let inside of a block, the variable is only available inside of the block. In fact, each time the block is run, such as within a for loop, it will create a new variable in memory.

ES6 also introduces the const keyword for declaring variables. const is also block scoped. The difference between let and const is that const variables need to be declared using an initializer, or it will generate an error.

And, finally, when it comes to the Execution Context, variables defined with var will be attached to the 'this' object. In the global Execution Context, that will be the window object in browsers. This is not the case for let or const.