Why are arrow functions as static members values not lexically scoped?

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class Foo {
  static v = 123;

  static bar = () => this.v;
}

console.log(Foo.bar());

I expect this code to return undefined, because arrow functions are lexically scoped, hence this must be eagerly bound to the outer scope.

Yet, it returns 123.

Why exactly does this happen?

And yep, I understand it's still stage 3, but still - why does the proposed standard behave like that? (See https://babeljs.io/docs/en/babel-plugin-transform-class-properties for another example.)

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Felix Kling On BEST ANSWER

tl;dr: Every class field (static or not) is internally wrapped in a method which gets invoked with the corresponding receiver (class or instance) at some point.


So, I'm not sure on some of those details *, but basically this happens:

For every field with an initializer (static or not), a function/method is created, with the initializer as its body. So this

static foo = () => this.v;

becomes something like this internally

function () { () => this.v }

That's in the proposal in step 28, which eventually leads to ClassFieldDefinitionEvaluation in this spec. The method is created in step 3.e.

The static fields (which are methods now) are then taken and called with the class object itself as receiver (i.e. the this value inside that intermediate method is set to the class object). This happens in step 34.a, which leads to DefineField in this spec. Finally the return value (in your case the arrow function) is used as value for the actual property.

Expressed as code, this is roughly what happens:

class Foo {}

Foo.v = function() { return 123; }.call(Foo);
Foo.bar = function() { return () => this.v; }.call(Foo);

*: I'm not quite clear how the intermediate method returns the value, but there is probably something that says that the last expression of the function body is returned or something.