JavaScript Variables can be declared in 4 ways:
var
let
const
In this first example, x
, y
, and z
are undeclared variables.
They are automatically declared when first used:
It is considered good programming practice to always declare variables before use.
From the examples you can guess:
The var
keyword was used in all JavaScript code from 1995 to 2015.
The let
and const
keywords were added to JavaScript in 2015.
The var
keyword should only be used in code written for older browsers.
The two variables price1
and price2
are declared with the const
keyword.
These are constant values and cannot be changed.
The variable total
is declared with the let
keyword.
The value total
can be changed.
1. Always declare variables
2. Always use const
if the value should not be changed
3. Always use const
if the type should not be changed (Arrays and Objects)
4. Only use let
if you can't use const
5. Only use var
if you MUST support old browsers.
Just like in algebra, variables hold values:
let x = 5;
let y = 6;
Just like in algebra, variables are used in expressions:
let z = x + y;
From the example above, you can guess that the total is calculated to be 11.
Variables are containers for storing values.
All JavaScript variables must be identified with unique names.
These unique names are called identifiers.
Identifiers can be short names (like x and y) or more descriptive names (age, sum, totalVolume).
The general rules for constructing names for variables (unique identifiers) are:
JavaScript identifiers are case-sensitive.
In JavaScript, the equal sign (=
) is an "assignment" operator, not an "equal to" operator.
This is different from algebra. The following does not make sense in algebra:
x = x + 5
In JavaScript, however, it makes perfect sense: it assigns the value of x + 5 to x.
(It calculates the value of x + 5 and puts the result into x. The value of x is incremented by 5.)
The "equal to" operator is written like ==
in JavaScript.
JavaScript variables can hold numbers like 100 and text values like "John Doe".
In programming, text values are called text strings.
JavaScript can handle many types of data, but for now, just think of numbers and strings.
Strings are written inside double or single quotes. Numbers are written without quotes.
If you put a number in quotes, it will be treated as a text string.
Creating a variable in JavaScript is called "declaring" a variable.
You declare a JavaScript variable with the var
or the let
keyword:
var carName;
or:
let carName;
After the declaration, the variable has no value (technically it is undefined
).
To assign a value to the variable, use the equal sign:
carName = "Volvo";
You can also assign a value to the variable when you declare it:
let carName = "Volvo";
In the example below, we create a variable called carName
and assign the value "Volvo" to it.
Then we "output" the value inside an HTML paragraph with id="demo":
<p id="demo"></p>
<script>
let carName = "Volvo";
document.getElementById("demo").innerHTML = carName;
</script>
Try it Yourself »
It's a good programming practice to declare all variables at the beginning of a script.
You can declare many variables in one statement.
Start the statement with let
and separate the variables by comma:
A declaration can span multiple lines:
In computer programs, variables are often declared without a value. The value can be something that has to be calculated, or something that will be provided later, like user input.
A variable declared without a value will have the value undefined
.
The variable carName will have the value undefined
after the execution of this statement:
If you re-declare a JavaScript variable declared with var
, it will not lose its value.
The variable carName
will still have the value "Volvo" after the execution of these statements:
You cannot re-declare a variable declared with let
or const
.
This will not work:
let carName = "Volvo";
let carName;
As with algebra, you can do arithmetic with JavaScript variables, using operators like =
and +
:
You can also add strings, but strings will be concatenated:
Also try this:
If you put a number in quotes, the rest of the numbers will be treated as strings, and concatenated.
Now try this:
Since JavaScript treats a dollar sign as a letter, identifiers containing $ are valid variable names:
Using the dollar sign is not very common in JavaScript, but professional programmers often use it as an alias for the main function in a JavaScript library.
In the JavaScript library jQuery, for instance, the main function $
is used to select HTML elements. In jQuery $("p");
means "select all p elements".
Since JavaScript treats underscore as a letter, identifiers containing _ are valid variable names:
Using the underscore is not very common in JavaScript, but a convention among professional programmers is to use it as an alias for "private (hidden)" variables.
截取页面反馈部分,让我们更快修复内容!也可以直接跳过填写反馈内容!