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I'm wondering how to go about doing this. Not sure what the terminology is so I apologize for that. I've seen this behavior in jQuery when you use the .css() method. As you may know already, this method accepts a couple of options:

You can do the following:

$("#box").css("background-color", "red");//sets the bg color to red
$("#box").css("background-color");//returns the bg color of #box
var properties = {"background-color" : "red", "width" : 100};
$("#box").css(properties); //sets multiple properties in one call with literal object.

So, I'm not so much worried about the getter portion of this functionality. I'm most interested in it's ability to differentiate between a variable and a literal object. I'd like to create a plugin that has the same behavior based on the argument it receives. A simple example would be something like this:

function openWindow(URL_OR_OBJECT){
    if(variable){
    window.open(URL_OR_OBJECT);
   return; 
  }
   var opt = URL_OR_OBJECT;
   window.open(opt.url, opt.title, opt.options, opt.replace);
}

3 Answers 3

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You can inspect the type of the parameter with typeof

function openWindow(parameter){
    if(typeof parameter == "string"){
        window.open(parameter);
    }
    else if(typeof parameter == "object"){
        window.open(parameter.url, parameter.title, parameter.options, parameter.replace);
    }
}
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You could use typeof to see if the argument is a string.

if ( typeof URL_OR_OBJECT === "string" ) {
  window.open(URL_OR_OBJECT);
} else { /*...*/ }

You can to be a little cautious using this because typeof new String("hello") is "object". But I don't think too many people declare a string that way.

typeof docs on MDN: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/typeof

0

While I have not looked at the source code in particular, I presume it is structured something similar to this:

function css(bgcolor_or_obj, width, etc) {
    var bgcolor;
    if(typeof bgcolor_or_obj === 'object') {
        // Expand configuration object here.
        bgcolor = bgcolor_or_obj.bgcolor;
        width = bgcolor_or_obj.width;
        etc = bgcolor_or_obj.etc;
    } else {
        bgcolor = bgcolor_or_obj;
    }

    /* ... */
}

I am aware of no standardized way in Javascript to differentiate between an argument passed to a function as being a variable or a literal. It is more likely that the function in question is checking if the first argument is an object, as demonstrated above.

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