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Home/ Questions/Q 7690085
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 31, 20262026-05-31T20:18:58+00:00 2026-05-31T20:18:58+00:00

Why the following code will return obvious , surprise! (and lastly how come? ).

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Why the following code will return “obvious”, “surprise!” (and lastly “how come?”). It should return “expected”, isn’t it?
In the first if we used anonymous functions, in the second we used ‘named’ functions.

var a = 5;
if (a == 5) {
    var b = function () {
        return "obvious";
    };
} else {
    var b = function () {
        return "never";
    };
}

if (a == 5) {
    function c() {
        return "expected";
    }
} else {
    function c() {
        return "surprise!";
    }
    function d() {
        return "how come?";
    }
}

alert(b());
alert(c());
alert(d());

So this means, function a(){} is NOT equal to var a = function (){}.

So, the second question, why JS needs this peculiar behavior? What’s the benefit of this ?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-31T20:18:59+00:00Added an answer on May 31, 2026 at 8:18 pm

    All variable declarations and function declarations are hoisted to the top of the scope, in this case the top of the script. This means the code is interpreted as if it was,

    var a,b;
    function c() { 
        return "expected"; 
    } 
    function c() { 
        return "surprise!"; 
    } 
    function d() { 
        return "how come?"; 
    } 
    
    a = 5; 
    if (a == 5) { 
        b = function () { 
            return "obvious"; 
        }; 
    } else { 
        b = function () { 
            return "never"; 
        }; 
    } 
    
    if (a == 5) { 
    } 
    else { 
    } 
    
    alert(b()); 
    alert(c()); 
    alert(d()); 
    

    Note that the last if statement is empty as all the function declarations they contained were hoisted. The second declaration of the function c obscures the first.

    I recommend you avoid using funciton declaration syntax in a block statement. It is techincally not legal JavaScript but every browser supports it even though it leads to confusion as you have noted.

    function a(){} is NOT equal to var a = function (){}.

    Correct. This has never been the case.

    So, the second question, why JS needs this peculiar behavior? What’s the benefit of this ?

    JavaScript hoists function declarations to allow function declared later in the script to be used by function earlier in a script. This allows much more flexiblity in code organization.

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