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Home/ Questions/Q 3210482
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T14:34:17+00:00 2026-05-17T14:34:17+00:00

i have a javascript code fragment as var u = {}; var x =

  • 0

i have a javascript code fragment as

var u = {};
var x = y = z = {"cvalue":"cell", "call":function(){alert(this.cvalue);}};

(function(){u=x;/*change all cvalue in x,y, z, u*/ u.cvalue = "notcell";})();

if(u == x && x == y && y == z && z == u){
    u.call();
}

//only u goes to null
u = null;
//x,y,z stay same
alert(x.cvalue);

wondering why u = null only applies for u?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T14:34:18+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 2:34 pm

    Variables don’t actually hold an object, but simply hold a reference to one. By assigning u to null, you’re dropping the reference that u had to the object.

    A more basic example:

    var x = { 'name': 'Bob' };
    var y = x;
    
    console.log(x);   //  Object { name="Bob"}
    console.log(y);   //  Object { name="Bob"}
    
    y.name = 'Jack';
    
    console.log(x);   //  Object { name="Jack"}
    console.log(y);   //  Object { name="Jack"}
    
    x = null;
    
    console.log(x);   //  null
    console.log(y);   //  Object { name="Jack"}
    

    Note how our object isn’t held in x. It’s held somewhere in memory, and x is referring to it. When we do y = x, we copy the reference to y, and therefore y begins to refer to the same object. Setting x to null simply drops the reference that x holds to the object, leaving the actual object unaffected. If we were to set y to null, or to anything else, the garbage collector would eventually pick up the object for destruction.

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