When we define a top level named function in Javascript, it becomes a method of the window object. What is the reason for this design decision?
2 Answers
Javascript always run in a particular global context. In a browser environment that is the window object, so when you define a global, you're actually adding it to window...
Here is another excellent stackoverflow answer explaining why this is so: Is window really global in Javascript?
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This is true, but does not explain why
window
was chosen instead of a dedicated global object. To be fair though, I don't know if this answer is easy to find if you haven't been in involved in browser / JS engine development May 27, 2013 at 19:25 -
@FelixKling what would you suggest be the topmost context then? :) May 27, 2013 at 19:51
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As I said, you could simply have another dedicated global object, accessible as
global
, like in Node.js. That a global has to exist is clear, but why is itwindow
? May 27, 2013 at 21:03 -
@FelixKling: The concept is the same in NodeJS. The global is just exposed under a different name, which is expected since the name
window
wouldn't make much sense on a server. In other words,window
in a browser, andglobal
in NodeJS is the dedicated global object.– user1106925May 27, 2013 at 21:36 -
@squint: I know. But
window
contains other properties as well, which are not part of the ES specification. I know that the spec explicitly allows this, but sincewindow
already contains many DOM related properties, using a dedicated global object for global variables only, instead of such a mix up, doesn't seem to be a bad solution. That is what I meant. May 27, 2013 at 21:52
What is the reason for this design decision?
I can't answer that, we'd have to ask the guy who designed the language, and the committee that maintains its specification. But maybe this will give you some insights: internally, variables (local or global) are always stored in "Lexical Environment" objects. So, they are always properties, and they even have their own properties (to mark them as read-only, non-deletable, etc.).
The environment objects are not exposed in browser JavaScript, except for the global object (as pointed out by squint in the comments, ECMAScript doesn't actually require that the global variable object be exposed, that's up to the implementation.)
It happens that it was decided that the global object is the same as the window object in browsers. Why? Again, I can't answer that. They just decided not to use a dedicated global
(or whatever) identifier.
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3+1 I'd only add the small point that ECMAScript doesn't actually require that the global variable object be exposed. An implementation could decide to not expose it, and it would be compliant.– user1106925May 27, 2013 at 20:06
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1Thanks, added a note about that. But let me ask: in implementations where it's not exposed (if you know any), is it still be possible to access stuff like
parseInt
and theObject
constructor? May 27, 2013 at 20:28 -
3Since
parseInt
andObject
are properties of the global object and therefore global variables, they can still be accessed. Even if the object itself is not exposed, those properties/variables will be looked up through the scope chain. I have to say though that I don't know such an implementation, this is my interpretation from the specification. May 27, 2013 at 21:06 -
1Yeah, what @FelixKling said. :-) If you're curious, the last paragraph of 15.1 is where the
window
property is described as an example of a "host" property.– user1106925May 27, 2013 at 21:29 -
@squint So that's the reason for
window.window.window.window...
. Without it,window
itself wouldn't be exposed! May 27, 2013 at 22:01