What does (function (x,y){...})(a,b); mean in JavaScript?
function() {}
is a definition of an anonymous function and (function() {})()
is a call of that anonymous function.
This works since functions can be passed like data. So window.alert
is the known alert
function itself and window.alert()
will call that function.
This technique is often used to keep the current variable scope clean as the function has its own variable scope.
In javascript you can have anonymous
and self invoking
functions.
function add(a, b)
{
return a + b;
}
is same as
var add = function (a, b) {
return a + b;
}
and you call these as
add(10, 20)
You can define the function and call it immediately as
(
function(a, b)
{
return a + b;
}
)(10, 20);
The
(
function(a, b)
{
return a + b;
}
)
part defines a function, and the (10, 20)
immediately after it calls the function just defined, with 10 and 20 as arguments to it.
Since the function does not have a name, it cannot be used later in the code.
The code in your question is probably minified, and creates a function in a similar way and calls it immediately.