Komentáře •

  • @usmanquickcode
    @usmanquickcode Před 21 dnem +51

    I just gave my interview and in this interview they asked me about closures. which ofcourse i have no idea. I have used it but no idea what is called. and i open my youtube and boom you are there. really like the simple explaination.

    • @anothermouth7077
      @anothermouth7077 Před 21 dnem +5

      Those know-it-all interviewers always play with these gotcha questions which are not even practical anymore

    • @looming_
      @looming_ Před 21 dnem

      @@anothermouth7077closures are pretty important tho

    • @thecoolnewsguy
      @thecoolnewsguy Před 21 dnem +5

      Such useless interview questions. They really need to ask about the job instead of stupid shit that you're not gonna use 95% of the time

    • @jessecalato4677
      @jessecalato4677 Před 20 dny +4

      ​@thecoolnewsguy you will use closures constantly though, and terminology is important for proper communication...

    • @thecoolnewsguy
      @thecoolnewsguy Před 20 dny

      @@jessecalato4677 I know. Yes closures are used extensively but asking about the var gotcha in a loop is just stupid like who's gonna use var in 2024 for a new code?

  • @matheusneves688
    @matheusneves688 Před 20 dny +1

    Thank you! Amazing content!

  • @PavloBozhok
    @PavloBozhok Před 20 dny +1

    Thanks a lot, I know and remember how closure works in javascript, but I never knew about something tricks.

  • @jovi9918
    @jovi9918 Před 21 dnem +2

    Great quick watch

  • @mewansynniang1902
    @mewansynniang1902 Před 8 dny +2

    Beautifully explained

  • @xzex2609
    @xzex2609 Před 21 dnem +13

    React vue and angular use closures all the time , all functional components are closures

    • @maciejzettt
      @maciejzettt Před 19 dny +2

      As well as state management is

    • @Regeneration1996
      @Regeneration1996 Před 15 dny +1

      And react hooks to 😅

    • @xzex2609
      @xzex2609 Před 15 dny +2

      @@Regeneration1996 of course in the end a hook will return some functions as objects and states too , when I was said react I mean most of it uses closures

  • @TalesGrechi
    @TalesGrechi Před 21 dnem

    Great video!

  • @RaimundoAraujoCorrea
    @RaimundoAraujoCorrea Před 18 dny +1

    I use one type closure all the time, combined with promises, when I have to execute a function on an array of data asynchronously, all you have to do is return a promise with a function, inside create a couter at 0, create the function thats going to process an entry, before return, incremente the counter, and excecute the inner function again, when its done, resolve the promise.

  • @blueghost512
    @blueghost512 Před 21 dnem +4

    Best used in Factory design pattern.

  • @tommysmith5479
    @tommysmith5479 Před 19 dny +1

    So, if I can sum up and get confirmation: a closure is where an outer function or scope is not garbage collected because there is an inner function that relies on the outer function or scope's variables... is this correct?

  • @karimkrimou399
    @karimkrimou399 Před 21 dnem +1

    Excellent and really clear approch and explantion

  • @ironCheval
    @ironCheval Před 21 dnem +1

    Does it keep the dependant variable and delete the old ones?
    E.x. when you added age = 30, will age = 29 be kept still by javascript?

    • @MbzMOKKA
      @MbzMOKKA Před 21 dnem +1

      No because it's the same memory spot.
      In his example, when he does age = 30, it overwrites the value 29 in variable 'age', instead of creating a new variable.

  • @doniaelfouly4142
    @doniaelfouly4142 Před 18 dny

    Thanks

  • @crakyanime8903
    @crakyanime8903 Před 20 dny

    it would be good if you cover conditional scope or conditional closures

  • @saurabhshrivastava5383

    Hello Kayal, In your second example for closuers "function elementCreator(element)", if we directly return document.createElement(element) instead returning a function then what difference will it make, I think direct return will be better, what you suggest.

  • @captkalik
    @captkalik Před 13 dny

    That for loop let var closure interview question is just brutal

  • @lesalmin
    @lesalmin Před 21 dnem

    This is the best explanation of closures I've seen (including your own previous explanations).

  • @manpreetjord1885
    @manpreetjord1885 Před 19 dny

    Great video as usual. But Kyle, your 1x Playback speed feels like 1.25x bro. 🙂
    Interviewers also ask that how you will print 0,1,2 when using var i=0; . We have to use the concept of closure here.

  • @Kingreey
    @Kingreey Před 2 dny

    Excelent

  • @QuanTran-wt4yt
    @QuanTran-wt4yt Před 20 dny

    Can you make a video talking about message queue?

  • @alexandraweather4156
    @alexandraweather4156 Před 19 dny

    Thank you for this video and the job you do, but what is a JavaScript Developer? The only thing i could find is "JS developer" - in react, angular, vue and stuff
    Is there atually a job for JS developer in JS?

  • @dfields9511
    @dfields9511 Před 21 dnem

    Pascal lets you do this as a well, never used that feature of pascal. But was forced to Learn it

  • @siasquad7360
    @siasquad7360 Před 21 dnem

    Sir please explain with the help of draw and after that code

  • @plamenyordanov131
    @plamenyordanov131 Před 11 dny +1

    Printing 3 times 3 has more to do with the event loop than closures

  • @Mari_Selalu_Berbuat_Kebaikan

    Let's always do alot of good ❤

  • @iftekharhaidar2397
    @iftekharhaidar2397 Před 21 dnem

    Dear, could you please explain what is JavaScript reference memory?

  • @consoledoterror971
    @consoledoterror971 Před 21 dnem +5

    I think the explanation for var, let with for loop is a bit wrong. 🤔

  • @24306529
    @24306529 Před 18 dny +8

    dude be selling 10 other videos within 1 video

  • @mcRidersEvolution
    @mcRidersEvolution Před 20 dny

    What is the purpose of returning function which returns element and not returning element with the first function?

  • @sealsharp
    @sealsharp Před 21 dnem

    I was just wondering, is it possible to see the what structures&code JavaScript actually creates? Don't know how to call it.
    In C#, you can see the different stages ( C#, IL, ASM ) and that makes perfectly clear how closures technically work.

    • @letsbeafraid2233
      @letsbeafraid2233 Před 21 dnem

      JavaScript doesn't create code it gets JIT compiled into machine code directly by the engine. Read about V8 and how it works

  • @ajiteshmishra0005
    @ajiteshmishra0005 Před 20 dny

    Hii brother...
    You explained let and var concept in for loop.
    But still I'm confused.
    Can you explain in some other way.

  • @AlThePal78
    @AlThePal78 Před 21 dnem

    I honestly thought that it didn't call function too until it said return function to and since the variable was already age 30, that is why it started with 30. What if you called the function first?

  • @Pareshbpatel
    @Pareshbpatel Před 21 dnem

    JavaScript Closures, bautifully explained. Thanks, Kyle
    {2024-07-09}

  • @supernovaw39
    @supernovaw39 Před 20 dny

    Unrelated but why are you running VS Code as Admin? 🤔

  • @himalayagupta7744
    @himalayagupta7744 Před 16 dny

    I had doubts for this last example, so I asked gpt to explain it to me deeply. It errored the first few times but at last gave the correct answer which claude also verified.
    Yes, for each iteration of the loop, a new scope is created, and within that scope, a new binding for the variable i is created. Here’s a detailed breakdown:
    First Iteration (i = 0):
    A new scope is created.
    A new binding for i is created and initialized to 0.
    The setTimeout callback captures this binding, so it logs 0.
    Second Iteration (i = 1):
    A new scope is created.
    A new binding for i is created and initialized to 1.
    The setTimeout callback captures this binding, so it logs 1.
    Third Iteration (i = 2):
    A new scope is created.
    A new binding for i is created and initialized to 2.
    The setTimeout callback captures this binding, so it logs 2.
    In each iteration, the let declaration ensures that i is re-declared and re-initialized within the new scope. This results in three separate bindings for i, each one unique to its iteration.

  • @johnpatrickoldfield534

    Do you know how to do that integer story with a public bank website inside a private login inside page two with a currency and interger value where I need to insert a legal agreement account balance update from 0 => R 1 000 000 Zar ? It’s a public https web address?! The javascript wipes the direct insert after page refresh how do I make the interger value const? Do you have team viewer and want to try and or show me?

    • @JacobZigenis
      @JacobZigenis Před 20 dny

      Hate to break it to you, but absolutely no one is going to help you with manipulating a bank website. Further, what you're seeing isn't just javascript wiping the value. It's retrieving the value from the bank's servers, which you cannot modify no matter how much you manipulate the page. Gotta study up a lot more and stop asking for advice on malicious activities on CZcams. Also, on the off chance you do manage to do something malicious, you will almost certainly get caught.

    • @johnpatrickoldfield534
      @johnpatrickoldfield534 Před 20 dny

      @@JacobZigenis my laptops storage is full and not booting at the moment so I cannot screenshare. I don't see how it's my problem the external and Internal banking staff cannot manually show me howto insert credits into bank tables in cobol or whatever the language is from the email pseudocode to the browser web security layers in the osi model so that I may make debits to pay attorney legal fees for bank account topups. I think it's worth a trial investigation ie look, screenshare, record discuss, etc and a look into the file and code framework on the Javascript and in the console just for a deeper explination, because I just know sql server, table updates, hidden servers, html, Javascript and css. The actual coding language and topology to see exactly where the update changes are made. Worse case the system gets reported and then gets fixed. I don't think it's too complicated less than 1000 lines of code plus minus with like 400 lines on my screen at once with like 30 lines each side of the zero balance variable.

  • @viallymboma9874
    @viallymboma9874 Před 15 dny

    In fact the concept of react custom hooks relies on the notion of closure
    When you're building a react custom hook, you're actually using closure.

  • @green-coder-clj
    @green-coder-clj Před 21 dnem

    I misread the title as "Learn Clojure in 13 minutes" 😅
    Clojure & Clojurescript indeed help landing a job for the FE.

  • @user-ik7rp8qz5g
    @user-ik7rp8qz5g Před 19 dny

    What you describe is just oop, but with extra steps

  • @DanielBrownsan
    @DanielBrownsan Před 8 dny

    I genuinely thought I had the playback speed set to 150-200% for the first 3 minutes of the video.

  • @alienews0
    @alienews0 Před 10 dny

    5:00 nope u didn't called your function on that line, u declared it ; u called it on the last line : return func2

  • @MichaelKire
    @MichaelKire Před 21 dnem +13

    Fun fact. Classes in JS is actually just syntactic sugar for a closure with a special constructor/prototype function inside

    • @charleschukwuemeka8482
      @charleschukwuemeka8482 Před 21 dnem

      While watching the video, this came to my mind... It's nice seeing that someone else thought of the same thing

    • @trombecher
      @trombecher Před 20 dny +1

      A class is syntactic sugar for a function, not necessarily a closure. A function becomes a closure when capturing variables from the parent scope, not because it’s a class.

  • @aqibmalik6313
    @aqibmalik6313 Před 21 dnem

    first comment after first comment of arunkaiser😂😂

  • @jovincebrillantes1042
    @jovincebrillantes1042 Před 20 dny +1

    So they're called closures, well I'll be dammed. I've been calling them higher order functions all this time.

    • @rico454
      @rico454 Před 19 dny

      They are kinda the same thing. Higher order functions return a function and usually, the function that is returned has access to variables inside the original function which is what closures is. So yeah different concepts but essentially the same thing

  • @Efecretion
    @Efecretion Před 21 dnem

    Closure to scoping is like 0/1 to binary -- closure is how scoping is implemented in JS, while 0/1 is how binary is represented typically.

  • @BMikel
    @BMikel Před 21 dnem +2

    Please create Next js e-commerce project catalog with multiple checkboxes filtering, sorting, pagination, search. More e-commerce realistic. Thank you.

  • @arunkaiser
    @arunkaiser Před 21 dnem +2

    First comment

  • @trombecher
    @trombecher Před 21 dnem +5

    If you have a global function that captures a variable from the outer (global) scope, then this function is a closure, because a closure is a function that captures variables from the parent scope.
    Even if you are calling console.log, because console is a variable in the global scope, you are capturing a variable and therefore your function is a closure.
    The only functions in JavaScript that are not closures are pure functions.
    Please do some research before making a 13min video about a topic.

    • @looming_
      @looming_ Před 21 dnem +1

      Really makes me wanna buy his “course” xd

  • @alpaca_growing_kit
    @alpaca_growing_kit Před 21 dnem

    If you work with React you desperately need to understand closures. I have run into some insane React bugs that were created because of closures in complex functional React.

    • @alpaca_growing_kit
      @alpaca_growing_kit Před 21 dnem +1

      HINT: Watch out for modifying an onChange when its getting prop drilled. Another reason to create context hooks as often as possible...

    • @looming_
      @looming_ Před 21 dnem

      Fact that this dude didn’t mention react once makes me question his understanding. Also the fact he messed up the for loop example.

  • @jasonsworld333
    @jasonsworld333 Před 21 dnem +2

    Too bad the jobs are all taken lol

  • @AchwaqKhalid
    @AchwaqKhalid Před 21 dnem +1

    Dude increase your *FONT* size for tutorials at least 💡

  • @manit77
    @manit77 Před 17 dny

    This is not true for all programming languages. JavaScript is an anomaly.

  • @zfolwick
    @zfolwick Před 15 dny

    god I hate javascript

  • @b1studio648
    @b1studio648 Před 15 dny

    Why u move ur head too much? Can you hold your head still while recording or move less. I would appreciate it. The way u move your head makes me dizzy

  • @logimw
    @logimw Před 16 dny

    why your head bouncing so much? it's very disracting no matter how valuable content you show (always very valuable)

  • @AdolfRizzler41
    @AdolfRizzler41 Před 21 dnem +1

    Do a video on booty sizes