ES6: let and const keywords
Naftali Murgor
Posted on January 12, 2022
Introduction
In this blog article, we shall see various language features, introduced in ES2015(ES6) JavaScript version.
A list of a summary of the language features can be found in this previous ES6 and modern JavaScript.
Let's look at let
and const
keywords.
1. let
, const
keywords
In ES6, the var
keyword has been deprecated in favor of let
and const
keywords in variable definition, declaration and initialization.
let
is used to declare block-scoped variables.
var pov = 180 // don't use this
let pointOfView = 180 // reassignable, do this
pointOfView = 360 // change
const
behaves similarly to let
except that once variables are declared and initialized, they may never be reassigned once declared and initialized.
// declare constants using const
const THREAD_COUNT = 18 // must be declared and initialized in one line
const MAX_THREAD_COUNT // Uncaught SyntaxError: Missing initializer in const declaration
// somewhere later:
MAX_THREAD_COUNT = 18
For object literals, changing values stored in object properties work but reassigning the declared object throws an error.
const hero = {
name: 'Naruto',
age: 15,
jutsu: 'shadow clone justsu',
residence: 'Hidded Leaf Village'
}
hero.name = 'Sasuke'
alters the value stored in object property name
of the hero
object. However, reassigning the object like:
// reassigning the variable
// Uncaught TypeError: Assignment to constant variable.
hero = {
name: 'Sasuke',
age: 15,
jutsu: 'Fireball Jutsu',
residence: 'Hidden Leaf village'
}
Summary
ES6 introduces let
and const
keywords in place of var
keyword in declaration and initialization of constants and variables.
Use let to declare a variable that will change/be reassigned later and const for constants that are unlikely to change as the program executes.
Read more about 👉 Arrow functions
Posted on January 12, 2022
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