Q
What is the result of redeclaring a variable with 'var' in the same scope in JavaScript?

Answer & Solution

Answer: Option B
Solution:
Redeclaring a variable with 'var' in the same scope overwrites the previous declaration, thus the variable is overwritten.
Related Questions on Average

Which of the following statements is true regarding redeclaring variables in JavaScript?

A). You can redeclare 'var' variables within the same scope without errors

B). You can redeclare 'let' variables within the same scope without errors

C). You can redeclare 'const' variables within the same scope without errors

D). None of the above

Which of the following statements about 'let' and 'const' is false?

A). Both 'let' and 'const' are block-scoped

B). Both 'let' and 'const' cannot be redeclared in the same scope

C). 'let' can be reassigned, 'const' cannot

D). Both 'let' and 'const' can be redeclared in different scopes

Which of the following correctly describes variable hoisting with 'var'?

A). 'var' declarations are not hoisted

B). Only the variable declaration is hoisted, not the initialization

C). Both declaration and initialization are hoisted

D). Only in strict mode 'var' declarations are hoisted

Can you redeclare a 'let' variable in the same scope in JavaScript?

A). Yes

B). No

C). Only in strict mode

D). Only in non-strict mode

How does the scope of 'var' differ from 'let' and 'const' inside a function?

A). 'var' is block-scoped, 'let' and 'const' are function-scoped

B). 'var', 'let', and 'const' are all block-scoped

C). 'var' is function-scoped, 'let' and 'const' are block-scoped

D). 'var' and 'let' are block-scoped, 'const' is function-scoped

What happens if you try to redeclare a 'const' variable in JavaScript?

A). It will throw an error

B). The variable is overwritten

C). The variable is converted to 'let'

D). The program continues with a warning

What will happen if you try to use a variable before declaring it with 'let'?

A). It will return undefined

B). It will return null

C). It will throw a ReferenceError

D). It will return NaN

How does 'let' differ from 'var' in terms of scope?

A). 'let' is function-scoped, 'var' is block-scoped

B). Both 'let' and 'var' are block-scoped

C). 'let' is block-scoped, 'var' is function-scoped

D). Both 'let' and 'var' are function-scoped

What happens when you redeclare a variable with 'var' inside a function?

A). The variable is overwritten

B). The variable declaration is ignored

C). It throws an error

D). The function's scope is reset

Which of the following correctly describes variable hoisting with 'let' and 'const'?

A). Both 'let' and 'const' declarations are not hoisted

B). Only 'let' declarations are hoisted

C). Only 'const' declarations are hoisted

D). Both 'let' and 'const' declarations are hoisted but not initialized