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What "Hidden Features" of JavaScript do you think every programmer should know?

After having seen the excellent quality of the answers to the following questions I thought it was time to ask it for JavaScript.

Even though JavaScript is arguably the most important Client Side language right now (just ask Google) it's surprising how little most web developers appreciate how powerful it really is.

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1  
Sure, pessimist. :) I'd considered making this a community question. Also, after you get a certain number of points it's all diminishing returns. – Allain Lalonde Sep 14 '08 at 18:37
1  
I've been writing JavaScript professionally for 10 years now and I learned a thing or three from this thread. Thanks, Alan! – Andrew Hedges Sep 20 '08 at 7:39
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97 Answers

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It's surprising how many people don't realize that it's object oriented as well.

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vote up 36 vote down

Assigning default values to variables

You can use the logical or operator || in an assignment expression to provide a default value:

var a = b || c;

The a variable will get the value of c only if b is falsy (if is null, false, undefined, 0, empty string, or NaN), otherwise a will get the value of b.

This is often useful in functions, when you want to give a default value to an argument in case isn't supplied:

function example (arg1) {
  arg1 = arg1 || 'default value';
}

The debugger statement

This is not a JavaScript language feature by itself, this statement doesn't even exists on the ECMAScript Language Specification, but all the JavaScript implementations include it, this statement allows you to put breakpoints programmatically in your code, you can call it just by:

// ...
debugger;
// ...

And if the debugger is attached, it will break immediately, right on that line.

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15  
Not if it's null, if it's considered false. a = 0 || 42; will give you 42. This is comparable with Python's or, not C#'s ?? operator. If you want the C# behavior, do a = (b === null) ? c : b; – Armin Ronacher Sep 21 '08 at 22:18
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"Extension methods in JavaScript" via the prototype property.

Array.prototype.contains = function(value) {  
    for (var i = 0; i < this.length; i++) {  
        if (this[i] == value) return true;  
    }  
    return false;  
}

This will add a contains method to all Array objects. You can call this method using this syntax

var stringArray = ["foo", "bar", "foobar"];
stringArray.contains("foobar");
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This is generally considered a bad idea, because other code (not yours) may make assumptions about the Array object. – Chris Noe Sep 22 '08 at 19:45
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It's also generally considered a bad idea to make assumptions about the Array object. :( – eyelidlessness Oct 7 '08 at 23:47
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@Breton: It's not something specific to the Array class, it's just an example. I use this to extend the new Date().toString(); method, allowing to use a mask string. Any object can be extended, and all it's instances get the new method. – voyager Jun 30 at 16:42
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Here's one that can save your bacon from time to time:

obj = {a:"test"};
var a = obj.a;
var b = obj["a"];
a == b;

Some people don't know this and end up with code like this:

var str = "a";
var a = eval("obj." + str);

Not only is the above easier to read, it's also a lot safer and less likely to invite XSS attacks. For example:

var str = getStrFromGetVars(); //evil user sets getVar to "a; alert("lolz")"
var a = eval("obj." + str);   //alert boxes!

Please keep this in mind when writing your webapps and widgets.

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vote up 40 vote down

with.

It's rarely used, and frankly, rarely useful... But, in limited circumstances, it does have its uses.

For instance: object literals are quite handy for quickly setting up properties on a new object. But what if you need to change half of the properties on an existing object?

var user = 
{
   fname: 'Rocket', 
   mname: 'Aloysus',
   lname: 'Squirrel', 
   city: 'Fresno', 
   state: 'California'
};

// ...

with (user)
{
   mname = 'J';
   city = 'Frostbite Falls';
   state = 'Minnesota';
}

Alan Storm points out that this can be somewhat dangerous: if the object used as context doesn't have one of the properties being assigned to, it will be resolved in the outer scope, possibly creating or overwriting a global variable. This is especially dangerous if you're used to writing code to work with objects where properties with default or empty values are left undefined:

var user = 
{
   fname: "John",
// mname definition skipped - no middle name
   lname: "Doe"
};

with (user)
{
   mname = "Q"; // creates / modifies global variable "mname"
}

Therefore, it is probably a good idea to avoid the use of the with statement for such assignment.

See also: Are there legitimate uses for JavaScript’s “with” statement?

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13  
Conventional wisdom the with statment is to be avoided. If the user object didn't have one of the properties you mentioned, the variable outside the with block's pseudo-scope would be modified. That way lies bugs. More info at yuiblog.com/blog/2006/… – Alan Storm Sep 14 '08 at 7:54
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Douglas Crockford recently said "with" is one of the worst parts of JavaScript in a .NET Rocks! podcast. – Chris Mar 14 at 4:09
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Private Methods

An object can have private methods.

function Person(firstName, lastName) {
    this.firstName = firstName;
    this.lastName = lastName;

    // A private method only visible from within this constructor
    function calcFullName() {
       return firstName + " " + lastName;    
    }

    // A public method available to everyone
    this.sayHello = function () {
        alert(calcFullName());
    }
}

//Usage:
var person1 = new Person("Bob", "Loblaw");
person1.sayHello();

// This fails since the method is not visible from this scope
alert(person1.calcFullName());
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7  
@Zach, exactly! It's easy, after spending years working with class-based OO languages, to forget that they are merely one implementation of OO concepts. Of course, the various libraries that attempt to cram quasi-class-based OO into JS don't help either... – Shog9 Sep 20 '08 at 22:23
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vote up 114 vote down

Functions are first class citizens in JavaScript:

var passFunAndApply = function (fn,x,y,z) { return fn(x,y,z); };

var sum = function(x,y,z) {
  return x+y+z;
};

alert( passFunAndApply(sum,3,4,5) ); // 12

Functional programming techniques can be used to write elegant javascript.

Particularly, functions can be passed as parameters, e.g. Array.filter() accepts a callback:

[1, 2, -1].filter(function(element, index, array) { return element > 0 });
// -> [1,2]

You can also declare a "private" function that only exists within the scope of a specific function:

function PrintName() {
    var privateFunction = function() { return "Steve"; };
    return privateFunction();
}
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1  
There are three ways to make functions in javascript: function sum(x, y, z){ return (x+y+z); } and var sum = new Function("x", "y", "z", "return (x+y+z);"); are the other ways. – Marius Sep 14 '08 at 19:35
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The concept of functions-as-data definitely wins big points in my book. – Jason Bunting Sep 14 '08 at 21:52
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