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I've frequently encountered sites that put all of their javascript inside a "namespace" structure along the lines of

namespaces = { com : { example: { example.com's data} }

But setting this up safely with respect to other namespaced frameworks seems to require a relatively hefty amount of code (defined as > 2 lines). I was wondering whether anyone knows of a concise way to do this? and whether there's a relatively standard/consistent way to structure it? eg. is the "com" namespace directly attached to the global object, or is it attached through a namespace object?

[Edit: whoops, obviously {com = { ... } } wouldn't accomplish anything close to what i intended, thanks to Shog9 for pointing that out. :D]

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7 Answers

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Javascript doesn't have stand-alone namespaces. It has functions, which can provide scope for resolving names, and objects, which can contribute to the named data accessible in a given scope.

Here's your example, corrected:

var namespaces = { com: { example: { /* example.com's data */ } } }

This is a variable namespaces being assigned an object literal. The object contains one property: com, an object with one property: example, an object which presumably would contain something interesting.

So, you can type something like namespaces.com.example.somePropertyOrFunctionOnExample and it'll all work. Of course, it's also ridiculous. You don't have a hierarchical namespace, you have an object containing an object containing an object with the stuff you actually care about.

var com_example_data = { /* example.com's data */ };

That works just as well, without the pointless hierarchy.

Now, if you actually want to build a hierarchy, you can try something like this:

com_example = com_example || {};
com_example.flags = com_example.flags || { active: false, restricted: true};

com_example.ops = com_example.ops || (function()
    {
       var launchCodes = "38925491753824"; // hidden / private
       return
       {
         activate: function() { /* ... */ },
         destroyTheWorld: function() { /* ... */ }
       };
    })();

...which is, IMHO, reasonably concise.

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vote up 4 vote down

Here was an interesting article by Peter Michaux on Javascript Namespacing. He discusses 3 different types of Javascript namespacing:

  1. Prefix Namespacing
  2. Single Object Namespacing
  3. Nested Object Namespacing

I won't plagiarize what he said here but I think his article is very informative.

Peter even went so far as to point out that there are performance considerations with some of them. I think this topic would be interesting to talk about considering that the new ECMAScript Harmony plans have dropped the 4.0 plans for namespacing and packaging.

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vote up 2 vote down

I try to follow the Yahoo convention of making a single parent object out in the global scope to contain everything;

var FP = {};
FP.module = {};
FP.module.property = 'foo';
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vote up 1 vote down

The YUI library library has code which handles namespacing using a function which you may find preferable. Other libraries may do this also.

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As an alternative to a dot or an underscore, you could use the dollar sign character:

var namespaces$com$example = "data";
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What benefit does this provide? – eyelidlessness Oct 25 '08 at 4:11
By doing it this way, you don't have to define your namespaces as an object with nested inner objects. You can just define the name anywhere. – Mark Cidade Oct 28 '08 at 4:04
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To make sure you don't overwrite an existing object, you should so something like:

if(!window.NameSpace) {
    NameSpace = {};
}

or

var NameSpace = window.NameSpace || {};

This way you can put this at the top of every file in your application/website without worrying about the overwriting the namespace object. Also, this would enable you to write unit tests for each file individually.

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vote up 0 vote down

I like also this (source):

(function() {
    var a = 'Invisible outside of anonymous function';
    function invisibleOutside() {
    }

    function visibleOutside() {
    }
    window.visibleOutside = visibleOutside;

    var html = '--INSIDE Anonymous--';
    html += '<br/> typeof invisibleOutside: ' + typeof invisibleOutside;
    html += '<br/> typeof visibleOutside: ' + typeof visibleOutside;
    contentDiv.innerHTML = html + '<br/><br/>';
})();

var html = '--OUTSIDE Anonymous--';
html += '<br/> typeof invisibleOutside: ' + typeof invisibleOutside;
html += '<br/> typeof visibleOutside: ' + typeof visibleOutside;
contentDiv.innerHTML += html + '<br/>';​
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