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Javascript Fundamentals Series: Blocks

In this series, I'm going to explain the fundamentals of javascript.

In this post, we are going to learn more about Blocks.

Blocks

Let's read the definition by Mozilla - MDN

A block statement (or compound statement in other languages) is used to group zero or more statements. The block is delimited by a pair of braces ("curly brackets") and may optionally be labelled

In other words, a block is everything between {}

{ // block started
   var foo = "bar";
} // block ended

console.log(foo); // logs "bar"

It is important to mention that the block doesn't create a scope, so in our small example, foo variable is still accessible from outside the block, that is why we could log the variable with console.log(foo);. We'll see later in this post more about the scope.

This example is also valid:

function demo() {
   // first block
   { 
      var foo = "bar";
   }

   // second block
   {
      console.log(foo);
   }
}

Now, whenever we invoke demo(), we'll see that "bar" is logged in the console. Give it a try ๐Ÿ’ช!

It is worth mentioning, that we hardly ever gonna see this kind of snippet in a real-world app, please don't write functions with multiple blocks like I just did. This was only for demonstration purposes.

So, if blocks are not used as in the example above, why we need them? Well, the blocks are also the way we have to declare several statements "attached" to a conditional, loop, etc.

if (condition) {
  // this is a block
}

while (condition) {
  // this is a block
}

Thatโ€™s it! If you have any doubt donโ€™t hesitate to leave your comments or ask me โ€‹โ€‹via Twitter.

In the next post of this series, we're going to learn about functions ๐Ÿ˜Ž. Stay tuned!

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