I'm learning some ES6 features and of course came across the let keyword and its new scope (differs from var)
and I came across an example about the tricky scope of var and its hoisting.
but I can't fully understand why I get this result:
var events = ['click', 'dblclick', 'keydown', 'keyup'];
for (var i = 0; i < events.length; i++) {
var event = events[i];
document.getElementById('btn').addEventListener(event, function() {
document.getElementById('result').innerHTML = 'event: ' + event;
});
}
<button id="btn">Click Me!</button>
<span id="result"></span>
I understand that var event is hoisted outside the for loop but why is it getting the last event ('keyup') in the array every iteration of the loop?
Is the addEventListener function asynchronous and by the time its attaching the event the value of the event changes?