Consider the following example of using functions inside loops:
for (var i=1; i<=5; i++) { setTimeout( function delay(){ console.log( i ); }, i*100); }
This snippet should print 1
, 2
, 3
, 4
, and 5
on the console at an interval of 100 ms, right? Instead, it prints 6
, 6
, 6
, 6
, and 6
at an interval of 100 ms. Why is this happening? Here, we encounter a common issue with closures and looping. The i
variable is being updated after the function is bound. This means that every bound function handler will always print the last value stored in i
. In fact, the timeout function callbacks are running after the completion of the loop. This is such a common problem that JSLint will warn you if you try to use functions this way inside a loop.
How can we fix this behavior? We can introduce a function scope and local copy of the i
variable in that scope. The following snippet shows you how we can do this:
for (var i=1; i<=5; i++) { (function(j){ setTimeout( function delay(){ console.log( j ); }, j*100); })( i ); }
We pass the i
variable and copy it to the j
variable local to the IIFE. The introduction of an IIFE inside each iteration creates a new scope for each iteration and hence updates the local copy with the correct value.