Consider the following excerpt from ECMA-262 v5.1 (which I recently saw in this question):
A Lexical Environment is a specification type used to define the association of Identifiers to specific variables and functions based upon the lexical nesting structure of ECMAScript code. A Lexical Environment consists of an Environment Record and a possibly null reference to an outer Lexical Environment. Usually a Lexical Environment is associated with some specific syntactic structure of ECMAScript code such as a FunctionDeclaration, a WithStatement, or a Catch clause of a TryStatement and a new Lexical Environment is created each time such code is evaluated.
I thought that meant the body of catch
clauses would hoist its own variables like functions do, but apparently that's not the case:
var a = 1;
try {
console.log(x); // ReferenceError
} catch(ex) {
console.log(a); // 1, not undefined
var a = 3;
}
Does anybody know why? Also, why does a catch
clause need its own lexical environment?