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Home/ Questions/Q 369051
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T13:52:57+00:00 2026-05-12T13:52:57+00:00

NOTE : This question was asked from the viewpoint of ECMAScript version 3 or

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NOTE: This question was asked from the viewpoint of ECMAScript version 3 or 5. The answers might become outdated with the introduction of new features in the release of ECMAScript 6.

What exactly is the function of the var keyword in JavaScript, and what is the difference between

var someNumber = 2;
var someFunction = function() { doSomething; }
var someObject = { }
var someObject.someProperty = 5;

and

someNumber = 2;
someFunction = function() { doSomething; }
someObject = { }
someObject.someProperty = 5;

?

When would you use either one, and why/what does it do?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T13:52:57+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 1:52 pm

    If you’re in the global scope then there’s not much difference. Read Kangax’s answer for explanation

    If you’re in a function then var will create a local variable, “no var” will look up the scope chain until it finds the variable or hits the global scope (at which point it will create it):

    // These are both globals
    var foo = 1;
    bar = 2;
    
    function()
    {
        var foo = 1; // Local
        bar = 2;     // Global
    
        // Execute an anonymous function
        (function()
        {
            var wibble = 1; // Local
            foo = 2; // Inherits from scope above (creating a closure)
            moo = 3; // Global
        }())
    }
    

    If you’re not doing an assignment then you need to use var:

    var x; // Declare x
    
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