About This Book
Welcome to book 2 in the You Don’t Know JS Yet series! If you already finished Get Started (the first book), you’re in the right spot! If not, before you proceed I encourage you to start there for the best foundation.
Our focus will be the first of three pillars in the JS language: the scope system and its function closures, as well as the power of the module design pattern.
JS is typically classified as an interpreted scripting language, so it’s assumed by most that JS programs are processed in a single, top-down pass. But JS is in fact parsed/compiled in a separate phase before execution begins. The code author’s decisions on where to place variables, functions, and blocks with respect to each other are analyzed according to the rules of scope, during the initial parsing/compilation phase. The resulting scope structure is generally unaffected by runtime conditions.
JS functions are themselves first-class values; they can be assigned and passed around just like numbers or strings. But since these functions hold and access variables, they maintain their original scope no matter where in the program the functions are eventually executed. This is called closure.
Modules are a code organization pattern characterized by public methods that have privileged access (via closure) to hidden variables and functions in the internal scope of the module.