11

Have a look at this answer. Run the snippet and observe the results in snippet's console. Now, find the same code in JSFiddle, run it, and observe the results in your browser's console.

I can't understand why the code doesn't work in Stack Overflow's snippet, but works fine in JSFiddle?

This only happens if I have a declaration var status = ... in my code. If I change it to let status = ..., the problem goes away.

2
  • 2
    So, basically, how you are using JSFiddle is hiding a bug in your code, due to the default JSFiddle configuration masking the issue. In reality, it is JSFiddle that is giving the wrong results, not the Stack Overflow snippet.
    – Makyen Mod
    Dec 20, 2017 at 19:31
  • 4
    @31piy, I agree that snippets should not conflict with variables defined by SO. However, that's not the case here. You are conflicting with a global variable that exists on every single page, window.status (MDN), it's not an SO defined property. SO should not protect you from conflicts with base window properties. Doing so would result in masking errors, making it impossible to reproduce some issues.
    – Makyen Mod
    Dec 21, 2017 at 3:43

2 Answers 2

15

It's because the variable name is status. It conflicts with the global window.status variable. When you rename status to e.g. foo, it works.

console.log(status); // <empty string>
var status = {
  'To Do': 1,
  'Received': 2,
  'In Progress': 3,
  'Rejected': 4,
  'Verify': 5, 
  'Live': 6
};
console.log(status); // [object Object]
console.log(foo); // undefined
var foo = {
  'To Do': 1,
  'Received': 2,
  'In Progress': 3,
  'Rejected': 4,
  'Verify': 5, 
  'Live': 6
};
console.log(foo);
// { To Do: 1, Received: 2, In Progress: 3, Rejected: 4, Verify: 5, Live: 6 }

5
  • 1
    ... or we can declare it using let. This was the resolution which was suggested, and I did the same.
    – 31piy
    Dec 19, 2017 at 11:20
  • @31piy or a better name of statuses?
    – George
    Dec 19, 2017 at 11:21
  • @31piy that works too, but be aware of browser compatibility if you need to support older browsers.
    – user247702
    Dec 19, 2017 at 11:21
  • 3
    Encapsulation would work too, and is always a good idea. But yeah, a const declaration would be appropriate there.
    – user4639281
    Dec 19, 2017 at 16:40
  • Grundy's answer explains why it seems to work, unaltered, on jsfiddle and not in snippets.
    – canon
    Dec 21, 2017 at 18:52
10

A bit explanation: why this works on JSFiddle even with var.

By default, jsfiddle has next setting:

Load Type: OnLoad

enter image description here

and this generates next code:

<script type="text/javascript">//<![CDATA[

    window.onload=function(){
    var status = {
      'To Do': 1,
      'Received': 2,
      'In Progress': 3,
      'Rejected': 4,
      'Verify': 5,
      'Live': 6
    };

    var data = [{
        userName: "One",
        status: "Live"
      },
      {
        userName: "Two",
        status: "Rejected"
      },
      {
        userName: "Three",
        status: "To Do"
      },
      {
        userName: "Four",
        status: "Verify"
      },
      {
        userName: "Five",
        status: "Received"
      },
      {
        userName: "Six",
        status: "In Progress"
      }
    ];

    data = data.sort((a, b) => status[a.status] - status[b.status]);
    console.log(data);
    }//]]> 

</script>

As you can see, status in this case is a local variable, instead property of global object.

If change this settings to one of this:

No wrap - in head
No wrap - in body

You get same behavior as in snippet before.

BTW, code rendered in snippet same as for settings No wrap - in body

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