When you write
```
for (const x of l) {
setTimeout(() => x);
}
```
we need to add a closure because the variable is meant to be block-scoped and recreated each time the block runs. We do this.
However, we also add the closure when no loop is present. This isn't necessary, because if no loop is present then each piece of code runs at most once. I changed the transform to only add a closure if a variable is referenced from within a loop.
The let/const plugin can add closures where you don't expect them. This is undesirable in some perf-sensitive projects (ex: React). I added an option that throws whenever the plugin adds a function (as opposed to simply renaming variables when converting to var).