How bad is it to redefine special words (technically predefined global variables) like Object
in Node.js? I have a mongoose
model I want to call "Object" because, well, it represents an object, and the convention for mongoose
seems to be that the models are uppercase. However, I noticed that Object
is a keyword in JavaScript. I tried to use Node itself to see exactly what the Object
keyword does, based on what the JavaScript source code says about it. However, when I run console.log(Object.toString());
in the Node shell, it returns function Object() { [native code] };
. Other special words, like Boolean
and String
, produce similar output when logged. I would go into the Node source code, but I unfortunately have not had the privilege of learning C or C++.
Therefore, what would the repercussions of redefining JavaScript keywords like Object
, Array
, or Number
? I am mainly asking in the context of Node.js, but information about JavaScript in general would certainly be helpful. I will likely not use these variables as they were originally intended, which I believe is as a wrapper object for each type (Array
for arrays, Number
for numbers, etc.), but would there be any other unintended consequences in using them for a completely different purpose?
Object
is not a keyword. And, don't do that; it'll be horribly confusing.ObjectModel
instead.Object
? Does my computer blow up?