Speaking of which... is there a way to explicitly access a global variable in JS, even if you're in the context of an IIFE that defines a variable with the same name?
Except that in JS, everything is an object, and in my experience, it's not at all unusual to have functions defined at global scope, so it'd make good sense to be able to explicitly call those.
You could emulate it with having an object where you register the values const myGlobals = {} and then myGlobals.foo = 42. You can add these down the scope chain const myScopeLevel4Variables = {} etc. It might get cumbersome, though.
@CodyGray The modern (like 10 year old) approach to this is to define them in modules and only import what you use. Then if you want to introduce a new function convertCoffeeToCode(), you can import it when you use it. And if for any reason it needs to be defined again, it won't necessarily clash with the old one. Assuming you use them in two different modules.
If both need to be added to the same module, they can be renamed: import convertCoffeeToCode_Irish from './a' and import convertCoffeeToCode_Colombian from './b'
@CodyGray Erm sort of. You can write the userscript with modules but then you need to bundle it together into one file.
Or use the older module pattern and do it by hand.