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I've heard that accessing let and const values before they are initialized can cause a ReferenceError because of something called the temporal dead zone.

What is the temporal dead zone, how does it relate to scope and hoisting, and in what situations is it encountered?

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3 Answers 3

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let and const have two broad differences from var:

  1. They are block scoped.
  2. Accessing a var before it is declared has the result undefined; accessing a let or const before it is declared throws ReferenceError:

console.log(aVar); // undefined
console.log(aLet); // Causes ReferenceError: Cannot access 'aLet' before initialization

var aVar = 1;
let aLet = 2;

It appears from these examples that let declarations (and const, which works the same way) may not be hoisted, since aLet does not appear to exist before it is assigned a value.

That is not the case, however—let and const are hoisted (like var, class and function), but there is a period between entering scope and being declared where they cannot be accessed. This period is the temporal dead zone (TDZ).

The TDZ ends when aLet is declared, rather than assigned:

// console.log(aLet) // Would throw ReferenceError

let aLet;

console.log(aLet); // undefined
aLet = 10;
console.log(aLet); // 10

This example shows that let is hoisted:

let x = "outer value";

(function() {
  // Start TDZ for x.
  console.log(x);
  let x = "inner value"; // Declaration ends TDZ for x.
}());

Credit: Temporal Dead Zone (TDZ) demystified.

Accessing x in the inner scope still causes a ReferenceError. If let were not hoisted, it would log outer value.

The TDZ is a good thing because it helps to highlight bugs—accessing a value before it has been declared is rarely intentional.

The TDZ also applies to default function arguments. Arguments are evaluated left to right, and each argument is in the TDZ until it is assigned:

// b is in TDZ until its value is assigned.
function testDefaults(a = b, b) { }

testDefaults(undefined, 1); // Throws ReferenceError because the evaluation of a reads b before it has been evaluated.

The TDZ is not enabled by default in the babel.js transpiler. Turn on "high compliance" mode to use it in the REPL. Supply the es6.spec.blockScoping flag to use it with the CLI or as a library.

Recommended further reading: TDZ demystified and ES6 Let, Const and the “Temporal Dead Zone” (TDZ) in Depth.

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  • 3
    Also interesting: Why is there a temporal dead zone Commented Oct 19, 2015 at 13:53
  • @zeroflagL good link, thanks. Also it says: "foo is not undeclared, it is uninitialized", that language would be helpful to clarify/correct in the answer above. let foo in a block causes it to be hoisted and declared at the top of that block. The line of let foo causes it to be initialised. And foo = xyz causes it to be assigned a value.
    – AJP
    Commented Jun 4, 2017 at 1:04
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    I think this is a great post! However, I was under the impression that 'let' was not subject to hoisting? I found this in the Mozilla docs: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/… I'm not trying to be a curmudgeon, I was just curious and am opened to clarification.
    – dmarges
    Commented Oct 3, 2017 at 21:39
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    @jeows The MDN page still says they're not hoisted. You should try to edit that, if you are truly certain of what you are saying. I think I should post a question about that.
    – doubleOrt
    Commented Dec 5, 2017 at 22:01
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    @joews IMO, you could either say they are hoisted but they can't be accessed before their declaration is reached because of the TDZ, or you could say they are not hoisted but the TDZ will cause any references to them to throw an error. Practically, both statements are equally true. Except, I think, you are using the term "hoisting" in an abstract sense, as in "hoisting = whenever the engine is aware of that variable's existence". Is that why ? Plus, what do the specs say on that ?
    – doubleOrt
    Commented Feb 15, 2018 at 15:15
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Hoisting:
let,const,var are all get hoisted process.
(whats mean they go upper and declare in the top of the scope.)

Initialisation:

  • var go also through the initial process, and get initial value of undefined.
  • while let,const didn't go throw the initial process, so their values are still inaccessible, although they already declared. whats put them in temporal dead zone

So in shortly:

hoisting process: var, let, const
Initialisation process: var

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    I guess it's also important to mention that let and const are block scope, var is function scoped Commented Jan 14, 2021 at 8:55
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In case of let and const variables, Basically, Temporal Dead Zone is a zone

"before your variable is declared",

i.e where you can not access the value of these variables, it will throw an error.

ex.

let sum = a + 5;        //---------
//some other code       //         | ------>  this is TDZ for variable a
                        //         |
console.log(sum)        //---------
let a = 5;

above code gives an error

the same code will not give an error when we use var for variable 'a',

ex.

var sum = a;                            
console.log(sum)     //prints undefined
var a = 5;
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  • the console log produces "NaN" in the second example ( the result of adding undefined and 5). The declaratation of var a is hoisted, the inifialisation code settng a to 5 is not.
    – traktor
    Commented Jun 27, 2019 at 12:31
  • yes, right, a is hoisted without any initialization. So a will be undefined. Commented Jul 4, 2019 at 9:46
  • The 1st example quoted is not right, please correct it or remove it.
    – Aman Jain
    Commented Mar 2, 2020 at 8:14

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