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7.8 KiB
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JavaScript Function Expressions
🎯 한 줄 통찰 (One-line insight)
A function expression is a function stored in a variable — it behaves like a value (great for callbacks) but, unlike a function declaration, it is not hoisted and cannot be called before it is defined. [S1]
🧠 핵심 개념 (Core concepts)
- A function expression is a function stored in a variable. [S1]
- Often anonymous — functions stored in variables do not need names; the variable name is used to call the function. They can still be named. [S1]
- It is a statement — a function expression usually ends with a semicolon. [S1]
- Used as a value — because it is stored in a variable, it can be passed to other functions (callbacks). [S1]
- Hoisting difference — function declarations are hoisted and can be called before they are defined; function expressions are not hoisted and cannot. [S1]
🧩 추출된 패턴 (Extracted patterns)
- Store-then-call — assign a function to a
const, then invoke through the variable name (sayHello()). [S1] - Callback passing — pass a function expression as an argument so another function can invoke it (
run(sayHello)). [S1] - Define-before-use ordering — because expressions are not hoisted, declare them above the point of first call. [S1]
📖 세부 내용 (Details)
What is a Function Expression? A function expression is a function stored in a variable. A standard function: [S1]
function multiply(a, b) {
return a * b;
}
A function expression: [S1]
const multiply = function(a, b) {
return a * b;
};
After storing in a variable, the variable can be used as a function: [S1]
let z = multiply(4, 3);
Anonymous Functions Function expressions commonly create anonymous functions. The function is actually a function without a name; functions stored in variables do not need names — the variable name is used to call the function. However, function expressions can also be named: [S1]
const add = function add(a, b) {return a + b;};
Function Expressions Use Semicolons A function expression is a JavaScript statement. That is why it usually ends with a semicolon. [S1]
const add = function(a, b) {
return a + b;
};
Functions Stored in Variables Because a function expression is stored in a variable, it can be used like a value. This is useful when passing functions to other functions (callbacks). [S1]
function run(fn) {
return fn();
}
const sayHello = function() {
return "Hello";
};
run(sayHello);
Functions vs. Function Expressions
JavaScript functions are defined with the function keyword and can be defined in different ways. They both work the same when you call them; the difference is when they become available in your code. [S1]
Function Declarations vs Function Expression
A function declaration uses the function keyword, has a function name, parameters in parentheses, and a code block in brackets: [S1]
function add(a, b) {return a + b;}
A function expression uses the function keyword, parameters in parentheses, and a code block in brackets: [S1]
const add = function(a, b) {return a + b;};
Example: [S1]
const sayHello = function() {
return "Hello World";
};
sayHello();
The function above is stored in the variable sayHello. To run it, you call sayHello(). [S1]
Hoisting Function declarations can be called before they are defined. Function expressions can not be called before they are defined. Function declarations are hoisted: [S1]
let sum = add(2, 3); // Will work
function add(a, b) {return a + b;}
Function expressions are not hoisted: [S1]
let sum = add(2, 3); // ⛔ Will generate error
const add = function (a, b) {return a + b;};
Key Differences Syntax: function declarations require a name; function expressions can be anonymous. Hoisting: function declarations are hoisted, function expressions are not. Flexibility: function declarations offer more flexibility in how and where they are used. [S1]
When to Use Each Use function declarations for general-purpose functions; use function expressions when assigning functions to variables; use function expressions in callbacks and event handlers. [S1]
Later in this Tutorial
Function expressions enable several advanced techniques: arrow functions (modern concise => syntax for function expressions), callbacks (passing functions as arguments), closures (accessing variables from the containing scope), and IIFEs (functions that execute immediately upon definition). [S1]
Common Mistakes
Forgetting the semicolon (expressions are statements and should end with semicolons); expecting hoisting (expressions are not hoisted, cannot call before definition); confusing reference and call (sayHello is the function, sayHello() calls it); confusing function names and variables (in expressions, the variable name provides the function reference). [S1]
⚖️ 비교 및 선택 기준 (Comparison & decision criteria)
| Aspect | Function Declaration | Function Expression |
|---|---|---|
| Name | Required | Can be anonymous |
| Hoisting | Hoisted (callable before definition) | Not hoisted (must define first) |
| Flexibility | More flexible in how/where used | Used as a value (callbacks, variables) |
| When to use | General-purpose functions | Variable assignment, callbacks, event handlers |
🛠️ 적용 사례 (Applied in summary)
The page's own snippets are the canonical applied examples — multiply/add expressions, the run(sayHello) callback pattern, and the hoisting error/success comparison. No external project/commit applications found in the source.
💻 코드 패턴 (Code patterns)
Function expression stored in a variable:
const multiply = function(a, b) {
return a * b;
};
Passing a function expression as a callback:
function run(fn) {
return fn();
}
const sayHello = function() {
return "Hello";
};
run(sayHello);
⚖️ 모순 및 업데이트 (Contradictions & updates)
No contradictions found in the source.
✅ 검증 상태 및 신뢰도
- 상태: draft
- 검증 단계: conceptual (실제 적용 사례 발견 시 applied/validated로 승격 가능)
- 출처 신뢰도: B (W3Schools — widely used educational reference, not a primary standards body)
- 신뢰 점수: 0.88
- 중복 검사 결과: 신규 생성 (New discovery)
🔗 지식 그래프 (Knowledge Graph)
- 상위/루트: JavaScript Tutorial
- 관련 개념: JavaScript Arrow Functions, JavaScript Function Arguments, JavaScript Objects
- 참조 맥락: Referenced when choosing between declaration and expression syntax, and as the foundation for arrow functions, callbacks, and closures.
📚 출처 (Sources)
- [S1] W3Schools — JavaScript Function Expressions — https://www.w3schools.com/js/js_function_expressions.asp
📝 변경 이력 (Change history)
- 2026-06-23: Initial draft synthesized from the W3Schools "JavaScript Function Expressions" page (Astra wiki-curation, P-Reinforce v3.1 format).