Per ECMA-262 § 12.2, a VariableStatement (that is, var identifier=value
) explicitly returns nothing. Additionally, a VariableStatement is a Statement; Statements do not return values, and it is invalid to put a Statement somewhere an Expression would go.
For example, none of the following make sense because they put a Statement where you need value-yielding Expressions:
var a = var b;
function fn() { return var x; }
Per § 11.13.1, assignment to a variable (identifier=value
) returns the assigned value.
When you write var a = 1;
, it declares a
and initalizes its value to 1
. Because this is a VariableStatement, it returns nothing, and the REPL prints undefined
.
a=1
is an expression that assigns 1
to a
. Since there is no a
, JavaScript implicitly creates a global a
in normal code (but would throw a ReferenceError
in strict mode, since you're not allowed to implicitly create new globals in strict mode).
Regardless of whether or not a
existed before, the expression still returns the assigned value, 1
, so the REPL prints that.
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…