javascript- Uncaught SyntaxError: Identifier * has already been declared

venkata picture venkata · Apr 11, 2018 · Viewed 72.4k times · Source
console.log(a) //output:ƒ a(){}
var a = 1;
function a(){};
var a = 10;
console.log(a) //output:10

====================

var a = 1;
if(true){
  function a(){};
  var a = 10;
}
console.log(a) // this code throws Uncaught SyntaxError: Identifier 'a' has already been declared

both above code snippets are same except the if block.why does the latter throws error when its permissible in javascript to delcare same variable twice in the same scope with var as below

 function a(){};
 var a = 10; //no error

Also for a slightly different scenario after removing var from `var a = 10 in the above code ,then it works fine but output is surprising

 var a = 1;
 if(true) {
   function a(){};
   a = 10;
 }
 console.log(a) //output:ƒ a(){}

I am surprised to see this output as I am expecting 10 ..because two variables declared inside the if block refer to the same variable declared above as javascript var doesnt respect block scope but functional scope...so why not the output for above should be 10? where as the below code outputs 10 as i expected when replaced the function definition with function expression.

  var a = 1;
  if(true) {
    var a = function(){ console.log() }
    a = 10;
  }
  console.log(a) //output:10

Answer

Bergi picture Bergi · Apr 11, 2018

This is surprising as javascript var doesn't respect block scope but functional scope...

Sure, but you didn't use var for the declaration of a in the block scope. You used a function declaration, which does respect block scopes (otherwise it would be completely invalid code, as in ES5 strict mode).

It's permissible in javascript to declare same variable twice in the same scope with var as below

Same applies here. The function declaration in the block uses ES6 declaration semantics (like let or const), which does not allow redeclarations.