For JavaScript in most browsers*, you can read a character from a String by treating it like an Array. However, in all the browsers I've tried (IE9, Chrome, Firefox), you can't write to it like an Array.
var string = 'hello world';
alert(string[0]);//alerts 'h'
alert(string);//alerts 'hello world'
string[0]='j';
alert(string[0]);//alerts 'h'
alert(string);//alerts 'hello world'
This has repercussions for more than just JavaScript developers:
jelloPeople.roam();
Does anybody know the reasoning behind this?
For example, I've looked at Mozilla's documentation, and they allude to it but don't give an explanation:
"..trying to set a character via indexing does not throw an error, but the string itself is unchanged."
Bottom Line: It is strange and confusing to me that some array properties were given to Strings and not others.
UPDATE:
Ok, so JavaScript Strings are immutable objects, but why? It seems like operations such as the above would be faster if they weren't immutable (change 1 character as opposed to making a new 11 character string). In fact, I don't see a case with String functions where performance would be impacted negatively if they weren't immutable, but I see several where performance would be improved. Also, there is no true multi-threading in JavaScript, so no advantage to immutables there.
(removed and will research this and possibly ask in a new quesion)
*Not IE 6 or 7
jelloPeople.roam()
? What does that mean?