I\'m developing an app and don\'t have to ever worry about Internet Explorer and was looking into some of the features present in A+ grade browsers that aren\'t in Inte
As of April 2017:
All up-to-date major browsers such as Chrome, Firefox, and Edge support the ES2015 (aka "ES6") let
keyword.
iOS Safari did not support let
until OS 10 (e.g, OS 9 did not).
Some older browsers, such as IE9-IE11, support an early version of let
but don't support the semantics defined by ES2015 (particularly in relation to declarations in the headers of for
loops). So it's not a syntax error, and it does declare the variable, but it doesn't work the way it's supposed to. For instance, in a correct implementation, the following logs 0, 1, and 2; on IE9-IE11, it logs 3, 3, 3:
for (let i = 0; i < 3; ++i) {
setTimeout(function() {
console.log(i);
}, i * 100);
}
Obsolete browsers such as IE8 do not support it at all.
EDIT: let
and const
are supported by all modern browsers and are part of the ECMAScript 2015 (ES6) specification.
Basically if you don't need to support anything below IE11, let
and const
are safe to use nowadays.
On IE11 there's a small quirk with let
when used with for
loops, the variable is not bound to the for
block as you would expect, it behaves as var
did...
See also: let and const support.
Old and outdated answer from 2010: Those extensions are not ECMA-Standard, they are supported only by the Mozilla implementation.
On browser environments you should include the JavaScript version number in your script
tag to use it:
<script type="application/javascript;version=1.7">
var x = 5;
var y = 0;
let (x = x+10, y = 12) {
alert(x+y + "\n");
}
alert((x + y) + "\n");
</script>
There is partial support in Internet Explorer 11 (for scope is incorrect) and full support in all current browsers (ECMAScript 6 compatibility table: let).
Just an update: Chrome now supports let
but only if you declare the "use strict"
; directive.
A great deal of time has passed since this question was first asked: the 'let' and 'const' keywords have been introduced in ECMAScript 2015 (ES6). Search for 'let' or 'const' in this awesome ES6 compatibility table: https://kangax.github.io/compat-table/es6/
Internet Explorer and Opera don't support let
on any browser version, Firefox since version 2.0 and Safari since 3.2.
See this JavaScript version table on Wikipedia.
I just found out that you need to define whether you use JavaScript 1.7 or not. So your code will be:
<script type="application/javascript;version=1.7"> ... </script>