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I was looking through the jQuery code and found that isArray is implemented using the built-in function toString. I cannot find the documentation for this function on MDC. Does the doc exist? What does this function do?

isArray: function( obj ) {
             return toString.call(obj) === "[object Array]";
         },
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    In converts internal object state to it's string representation. May 13, 2010 at 19:02

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I was looking through the jQuery code and found that isArray is implemented using the built-in function toString

It's not a builtin. See line 68:

toString = Object.prototype.toString,

jQuery is taking a copy of the toString method on Object under its own variable named toString. The Object#toString method is documented at MDC here (and by ECMAScript itself). jQuery then calls the variable copy of the method using call and passing in the object as this. This roundabout calling method is so that you can't make an object that overrides toString() and might return the string '[object Array]'.

(In particular, the string '[object Array]' itself would have [object Array] as its toString() value, and so would erroneously be detected as an Array, if the obj.toString() were called directly. Calling Object's base implementation of toString() avoids this.)

Testing the toString() representation is ugly as hell (and still not quite 100% in the case of host objects), but the more straightforward obj instanceof Array doesn't work for cross-window-scripting, since Array is a different constructor in each window/frame.

ECMAScript Fifth Edition adds the function Array.isArray(obj) to avoid this unpleasantness. Browser support is currently poor, however.

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  • I see. Your explanation makes it mostly clear. When I said that toString was built-in I meant that it was implemented natively by the browser because calling Object.prototype.toString.toSource() tells you that it's natively implemented. The only question left is: why is it that methods of Object are accessible from the global scope? For example the following returns true in Firebug: toString === Object.prototype.toString May 13, 2010 at 19:59
  • That's a slightly different issue: because in browsers window is what ECMAScript describes as the “global object”, all members of window are accessible as global variables. This is why you can call eg. setTimeout() directly as well as window.setTimeout(). Window is a type of Object, so it happens that methods of Object will also be exposed. It's not guaranteed that toString===Object.prototype.toString, though; it is for me in Opera, Safari and Chrome, but not IE or Firefox 3.6. If you say toString.call(obj) when obj is not a Window instance, you'll likely get an error.
    – bobince
    May 13, 2010 at 21:42
  • Side-issue: in Firefox, for me, toString!==window.toString. This is to do with the arcane and confusing world of the inner vs. the outer window — stackoverflow.com/questions/2725188/…. It doesn't hold for other window properties.
    – bobince
    May 13, 2010 at 21:45
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    Bobince look closely: In the closure that that toString function is called, there is an assignment statement: toString = Object.prototype.toString The toString function has the value of the built-in Object.prototype.toString. As a side note, this triggers a bug in Blackberry browser, explained here: yura.thinkweb2.com/named-function-expressions/… The problem is avoidable by not naming identifiers with something that conflicts with properties of Object.prototype, e.g. var _toString = Object.prototype.toString.
    – Garrett
    May 14, 2010 at 2:49
  • @Garrett: Yes, that's the first thing I said in my answer! (And yeah, it's really sad that the egregious Blackberry scoping bug still isn't fixed.)
    – bobince
    May 14, 2010 at 11:38

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