/**
* @param {string} nameOfVariable
*/
function globalExists(nameOfVariable) {
return nameOfVariable in window
}
It doesn't matter whether you created a global variable with var foo or window.foo — variables created with var in global context are written into window.
I think this is actually a problem with JSLint. It will issue the following error:
Unexpected 'typeof'. Compare directly with 'undefined'.
I believe this is bad advice. In JavaScript, undefined is a global variable that is, usually, undefined. But some browsers allow scripts to modify it, like this: window.undefined = 'defined'. If this is the case, comparing directly with undefined can lead to unexpected results. Fortunately, current ECMA 5 compliant browsers do not allow assignments to undefined (and will throw an exception in strict mode).
I prefer typeof someVar === "undefined", as you posted, or someVar in window as Susei suggested.
As of ES6 most of other answers, including the accepted answer, are incorrect, because global variables defined by let or const, or resulting from a class declaration, do not have corresponding properties on the global object (window in a browser, or global in node.js). Several of them—mainly the ones which use typeof—can also be fooled by global variables which exist but which are set to undefined.
The only fully general way to test to see if a global variable exists—regardless of whether it has been declared using var, let or const, created via a function or class declaration, created by assignment (i.e., myVar = value at the top level of a program without any declaration for myVar) or by creating a property on the global object (i.e., window.myVar = value)—is to attempt to access it via a global eval and see if TypeError is thrown.
function globalExists(varName) {
// Calling eval by another name causes evalled code to run in a
// subscope of the global scope, rather than the local scope.
const globalEval = eval;
try {
globalEval(varName);
return true;
} catch (e) {
return false;
}
}
undeclared = undefined;
const myConst = undefined;
let myLet;
var myVar;
globalExists('undeclared') // => true
globalExists('myConst') // => true
globalExists('myLet') // => true
globalExists('myVar') // => true
globalExists('nonexistent') // => false
globalExists('globalExists') // => true - can see itself.
globalExists('varName') // => false - not fooled by own parameters.
globalExists('globalEval') // => false - not fooled by local variable.
Note that this makes use of eval, so all the usual caveats apply: you should not supply an untrusted value as the parameter, and if you must use an untrusted value you should check to make sure that varName is a valid JavaScript identifier. Doing so is out of scope for this question, but it can be done using a (rather complex) regular expression—just beware that the correct regexp depends on the version of ECMAScript you are using, whether the code is a script or (ES6) module, whether it is in an async function, etc. etc.