Your problem lies in that this
is not what you think it is. If you call utils.slice(foo, 1, 2)
, this
will be utils
.
Depending on how you want to call it, you could pass the object you want to operate on as first argument, then you would do:
var utils = {
slice: function() {
// The object we're operating on
var self = arguments[0];
// The rest of the arguments
var args = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments, 1);
return Array.prototype.slice.apply(self, args);
}
};
Usage:
var someSlice = utils.slice(someArray, 2, 14);
Another (perhaps clearer) option is to just use named arguments:
var utils = {
slice: function(array, from, to) {
return Array.prototype.slice.call(array, from, to);
}
};
This will work the same way.
Update: I got curious why Uint8Array
doesn't have slice
, and I found out about subarray
:
Int8Array subarray(
long begin,
optional long end
);
Note that
Note: Keep in mind that this is creating a new view on the existing buffer; changes to the new object's contents will impact the original object and vice versa.
It might be the case that this is what you want -- I'm betting on it being a lot more efficient -- if you don't need to copy the data, that is!
utils.slice.call(array, start, end)
..call
would be confusing. But thanks, helps me lot to understand javascript!