4

This JavaScript snippet

var x = window.foo;
window.x = null;
alert( window.bar === undefined );

alerts "true".

However, this snippet

var x = window.foo;
window[x] = null;
alert( window.bar === undefined );

alerts "false".

What is going on here?

(I am running this code in the latest Chrome browser inside a HTML page with no other JavaScript code in it.)

Update

As @elusive cleverly summed up in his comment below, I mistakingly assumed that window.x and window[x] are equivalent. That is not correct. window.x is equivalent to window["x"].

3
  • May we ask what the content of window.foo is?
    – Ivo Wetzel
    Nov 20, 2010 at 20:15
  • 5
    window.x is equivalent to window['x'] not window[x].
    – jwueller
    Nov 20, 2010 at 20:31
  • @elusive Yes, you summed it up into one sentence :) Nov 20, 2010 at 20:34

2 Answers 2

3

The behavior that you are experiencing is because the undefined property of the Global object, is mutable on any ECMAScript 3 based implementation. (latest Chrome versions are implementing ES5, but this behavior is still present).

Let's examine the second snippet:

var x = window.foo;
window[x] = null;
alert( window.bar === undefined );

The x variable will hold the undefined value, since the foo property does not exist.

By assigning window[x] = null, you are overriding the value of the undefined property:

window[x] = null; // is equivalent to
window['undefined'] = null; // or
window.undefined = null; //

(In your first snippet, when you assign window.x = null, you are creating a property named "x" on the window object.)

Therefore (in your second snippet), the undefined property will hold null, and window.bar will produce undefined:

alert( window.bar === undefined ); // false
alert( undefined  === null ); // false

The undefined property was not specified as { ReadOnly } on ECMAScript 3, (along with his friends NaN, Infinity).

This has changed in ECMAScript 5, those properties are described as non-writables.

7
  • @CMS Isn't the undefined global property mutable on any browser, not just Chrome? Nov 20, 2010 at 20:24
  • @Šime, it should be mutable on any ES3-based implementation. From the latest browser versions that I have tested (Firefox, WebKit, IE9, Chrome), Chrome is the only one that still has undefined as writable, even on Chrome 9.0.583.0. Nov 20, 2010 at 20:33
  • @CMS These are not the results that I'm getting. The latest versions of Chrome, Firefox and Opera allow me to change the value of the undefined global property. Only IE9 beta and Safari don't allow it. Nov 20, 2010 at 20:38
  • FWIW, jQuery is wrapped in (function(window, undefined) { ... })(window), which ensures that undefined actually does have its correct value. Nov 20, 2010 at 20:41
  • @Šime by latest versions I meant nightly builds, Firefox 4Beta8 Pre, Chrome 9.0.583.0, WebKit r72284, etc... they do implement a lot of ES5, Firefox and Webkit are finishing strict-mode support :) Nov 20, 2010 at 20:42
1
var x = window.foo;  // set the local variable x to the contents of window.foo
window.x = null; // set property x on window to null

Here you're directly setting the propery x to null.

var x = window.foo; // set the local variable x to the contents of window.foo
window[x] = null; // set they key with the value of x to null

Here you're setting a property by using it as a key on the window object. Which key is that? Well that depends on the value of x, if x is bar you will effectively do window.bar = null if x is blub you'll do window.blub = null.

For more information on this you should head over to MDC:
https://developer.mozilla.org/en/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/Member_Operators

2
  • 2
    Actually, this is global code, so x is a global variable. Nov 20, 2010 at 20:26
  • The answer is the same. window.x sets the property named 'x'. window[x] sets the property named 'value-of-global-variable-x'.
    – GolezTrol
    Nov 20, 2010 at 20:36

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