109

I start to read JavaScript Patterns, some codes confused me.

var global = (function () {
    return this || (1, eval)('this');
}());

Here are my questions:

Q1:

(1, eval) === eval?

Why and how does it work?

Q2: Why not just

var global = (function () {
    return this || eval('this');
}());

or

 var global = (function () {
    return this;
}());
2
  • I have updated the title because this is a specific case. Also, parenthesis for the specific kind of brackets: [] and {} are different entirely :)
    – user166390
    Feb 2, 2012 at 5:06
  • Since optional chaining made it into the spec, indirect eval has a slightly less obfuscated syntax: eval?.() (instead of (1, eval)()). Since this is an OptionalExpression and not a CoverCallExpressionAndAsyncArrowHead, as necessitated for direct eval, this is also an indirect eval. Jun 16, 2021 at 8:20

4 Answers 4

130

The difference between (1,eval) and plain old eval is that the former is a value and the latter is an lvalue. It would be more obvious if it were some other identifier:

var x;
x = 1;
(1, x) = 1; //  syntax error, of course!

That is (1,eval) is an expression that yields eval (just as say, (true && eval) or (0 ? 0 : eval) would), but it's not a reference to eval.

Why do you care?

Well, the Ecma spec considers a reference to eval to be a "direct eval call", but an expression that merely yields eval to be an indirect one -- and indirect eval calls are guaranteed to execute in global scope.

Things I still don't know:

  1. Under what circumstance does a direct eval call not execute in global scope?
  2. Under what circumstance can the this of a function at global scope not yield the global object?

Some more information can be gleaned here.

EDIT

Apparently, the answer to my first question is, "almost always". A direct eval executes from the current scope. Consider the following code:

var x = 'outer';
(function() {
  var x = 'inner';
  eval('console.log("direct call: " + x)'); 
  (1,eval)('console.log("indirect call: " + x)'); 
})();

Not surprisingly (heh-heh), this prints out:

direct call: inner
indirect call: outer

EDIT

After more experimentation, I'm going to provisionally say that this cannot be set to null or undefined. It can be set to other falsy values (0, '', NaN, false), but only very deliberately.

I'm going to say your source is suffering from a mild and reversible cranio-rectal inversion and might want to consider spending a week programming in Haskell.

12
  • 5
    Wow, didn't know the whole value vs lvalue thing (well, in practice maybe, but not in words). Nor the ES5 eval rules (not that I should reasonably need to use eval ever). Thanks!
    – Stoive
    Feb 3, 2012 at 0:04
  • Yeah, eval has a lot of nasty sharp edges and should only be used as a last resort and then, very, very carefully. Feb 3, 2012 at 1:43
  • I only once came across a valid use - evaluating a script tag that had been added to the DOM via innerHtml
    – Stoive
    Feb 3, 2012 at 2:39
  • 1
    lvalue has little to due with determining direct eval since it usually refers the expression that can appear on the left hand side of an assignment, hence the name lvalue as opposed to rvalue. A call to eval is direct only under the conditions listed in 15.1.2.1.1 of the spec which says the identifier must be eval and be the MemberExpression part of a CallExpression and refer to the standard eval function.
    – chuckj
    Feb 3, 2012 at 7:35
  • 1
    @Malvolio You seem to be implying that lvalues have something to do with direct vs. indirect eval which they don't. The use of an identifier called eval as the target of a call expression is special. You state that ECMA treats reference to eval special which it doesn't. It is the placement in the call expression that is special an that the expression evaluates to the standard eval function. For example, var eval = window.eval; eval('1'); is still a direct eval and window.eval('1') isn't even though eval is an lvalue in this case as well.
    – chuckj
    Feb 4, 2012 at 9:26
36

The fragment

var global = (function () {  
    return this || (1, eval)('this');  
}());  

will correctly evaluate to the global object even in strict mode. In non-strict mode the value of this is the global object but in strict mode it is undefined. The expression (1, eval)('this') will always be the global object.

The reason for this involves the rules around indirect versus direct eval. Direct calls to eval has the scope of the caller and the string this would evaluate to the value of this in the closure. Indirect evals evaluate in global scope as if they were executed inside a function in the global scope.

Since that function is not itself a strict-mode function the global object is passed in as this and then the expression 'this' evaluates to the global object. The expression (1, eval) is just a fancy way to force the eval to be indirect and return the global object.

A1: (1, eval)('this') is not the same as eval('this') because of the special rules around indirect versus direct calls to eval.

A2: The original works in strict mode, the modified versions do not.

12

To Q1:

I think this is a good example of comma operator in JS. I like the explanation for comma operator in this article: http://javascriptweblog.wordpress.com/2011/04/04/the-javascript-comma-operator/

The comma operator evaluates both of its operands (from left to right) and returns the value of the second operand.

To Q2:

(1, eval)('this') is considered as indirect eval call, which in ES5 does execute code globally. So the result will be the global the context.

See http://perfectionkills.com/global-eval-what-are-the-options/#evaling_in_global_scope

8

Q1: Multiple consecutive javascript statements separated by a comma take the value of the last statement. So:

(1, eval) takes the value of the last one which is a function reference to the eval() function. It apparently does it this way to make the eval() call into an indirect eval call that will be evaluated in the global scope in ES5. Details explained here.

Q2: There must be some environment that doesn't define a global this, but does define eval('this'). That's the only reason I can think of for that.

5
  • Perhaps someone's trying to dodge a check-in hook that disallows /eval\(/g?
    – Stoive
    Feb 2, 2012 at 4:43
  • @Stoive - yeah I wondered about something like that too. If not a checkin hook, some filter somewhere in the process (perhaps minimization).
    – jfriend00
    Feb 2, 2012 at 4:45
  • 7
    It has something to do with ES5 strict mode. AFAIK in ES5 strict mode any eval'd code is executed in its own context rather than in the global context or the enclosing context. One way around this is to indirectly reference it as the code in question does. Feb 2, 2012 at 4:54
  • 1
    Have a look at "Global eval. What are the options?".
    – Saxoier
    Feb 2, 2012 at 5:03
  • Updated my answer to include the info from CDSanchez and @Saxoier. Thx.
    – jfriend00
    Feb 2, 2012 at 5:34

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