Hi I am coming from C++ background and I have this question about js closure
suppose I have function:
function multiplier(factor) {
return (num) => num*factor;
}
let twice = multiplier(2);
console.log(twice(5));
In C++ we say that outside the multiplier scope the variable factor cannot be accessed or is destroyed (I don't know about the parameters but for local variables it is true)
But in JS closures we are actually using the local variable. So in JS it does not get destroyed
?
I mean local variable made with let keyword, or parameters
suppose I have function:
function multiplier(factor) {
return (num) => num*factor;
}
let twice = multiplier(2);
console.log(twice(5));
In C++ we say that outside the multiplier scope the variable factor cannot be accessed or is destroyed (I don't know about the parameters but for local variables it is true)
But in JS closures we are actually using the local variable. So in JS it does not get destroyed
?
I mean local variable made with let keyword, or parameters