whyLocalVarCallLet.html
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1<!DOCTYPE html> 2<html lang="en"> 3 4<head> 5 6 7<meta charset="UTF-8" /> 8<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0" /> 9<title>Why local variables are called "let" - S0G</title> 10<link rel="stylesheet" href="/src/global.css" /> 11 12<link rel="stylesheet" href="/src/pygments-friendly.css" /> 13<link rel="stylesheet" href="/src/blog.css" /> 14 15</head> 16 17<body> 18<header> 19<h2><a href="/">Steve0Greatness</a></h2> 20<nav> 21<a href="/blog">Blog</a> 22<a href="/link-tree.html">Link Tree</a> 23</nav> 24</header> 25 26<ol role="navigation" class="breadcrumbs" aria-roledescription="Site breadcrumb"> 27<li> 28<a href="/">Index</a> 29</li> 30 31<li > 32<a href="/blog"> 33Blog Index 34</a> 35</li> 36 37<li aria-current="location"> 38 39Why local variables are called "let" 40 41</li> 42 43</ol> 44<main> 45<article> 46<header> 47<h2 id="blog-post-titled">Why local variables are called "let"</h2> 48<div role="toolbar" class="toolbar"> 49<a href="https://toot.kytta.dev/?text=Take a look at this article by @S0G@mastodon.social: https://steve0greatness.github.io/blog/whyLocalVarCallLet.html" title="Share to Mastodon"> 50<img src="/toot-kytta-dev-icon.svg" width="16" height="16" aria-hidden="true" title="Share to Mastodon" /> 51</a> 52<a href="/blog/whyLocalVarCallLet.html" title="Direct link"> 53<span aria-hidden="true"> 54🔗 55</span> 56</a> 57<a href="/blog/whyLocalVarCallLet.txt" title="Markdown source"> 58<img src="/md-src.svg" width="16" height="16" /> 59</a> 60</div> 61<time>2022 Jan 10</time> 62</header> 63<p><p>In JavaScript there are 3 different kinds of variables, global variables(using <span class="code">var</span>), constants(<span class="code">const</span>, and local variables(<span class="code">let</span>). All of the act allittle differently from eachother. Allow me to explain what they do.</p><p>Global variables, made using <span class="code">var</span>, are as they sound, global variables. Once defined, they can be used, edited, or redefind anywhere.</p><p>Constants, defined with <span class="code">const</span>, are constant, they cannot change, at all.</p><p>Local variables, defined with <span class="code">let</span>, are variables that can only be used in the place that it is defined, like a function, and it's children.</p>Now that we has that established, <em>let</em>'s talk about how local variables got their name.<p>Turns out "let" is a mathematical term. <span class="quote">The <b>"let" expression</b> may also be defined in mathematics, where it associates a Boolean condition with a restricted scope.</span> <a href="https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Let_expression" class="source">[source]</a>. It was first used in programming in early languages like Basic.</p>In case you're wondering, the main source is <a href="https://stackoverflow.com/a/37917071">this answer on Stack Overflow</a>.</p> 64 65</article> 66</main> 67<footer role="group"> 68<div class="footer-link-list-holder"> 69<span aria-hidden="true" id="footer-label-social-accounts" class="footer-link-list-label">Social Accounts</span> 70<ol class="footer-link-list" aria-labelledby="footer-label-social-accounts"> 71<li><a href="https://mastodon.social/@S0G" rel="me">Mastodon</a></li> 72<li><a href="https://youtube.com/@s0g">YouTube</a></li> 73</ol> 74</div> 75</footer> 76</body> 77 78</html>