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Am not new to JS or its syntax, but sometimes, the semantics of the language has me stumped at times. At work today, a colleague mentioned this:

var a = b = [];

is not the same as

var a = [], b = [];

or

var a = []; var b = [];

since the first version actually assigns the reference to an empty array to a and b. I couldn't quite accept this as true, but I'm not sure. What do you all think?

question from:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3387247/in-javascript-is-chained-assignment-okay

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Yes, they're not the same. var a = b = [] is equivalent to

var a;
b = [];
a = b;

Not only do both a and b get assigned the same value (a reference to the same empty array), b is not declared at all. In strict mode in ECMAScript 5 and later, this will throw a ReferenceError; otherwise, unless there is already a variable b in scope, b is silently created as a property of the global object and acts similarly to a global variable, wherever the code is, even inside a function. Which is not good.

You can see this quite easily:

(function() {
    var a = b = [];
})();

console.log(b); // Shows []

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…
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