11

A few days ago a friend and I were playing around with the Javascript console in Chrome (using a slightly older version, but this can be repeated in the latest stable build on both OSX and windows) when we assigned a string to the variable $x.

$x = "hello"

but when we echo out the value of $x, we get given the following code in the console:

bound: function (xpath, context)
{
    var doc = (context && context.ownerDocument) || inspectedWindow.document;
    var result = doc.evaluate(xpath, context || doc, null, XPathResult.ANY_TYPE, null);
    switch (result.resultType) {
    case XPathResult.NUMBER_TYPE:
        return result.numberValue;
    case XPathResult.STRING_TYPE:
        return result.stringValue;
    case XPathResult.BOOLEAN_TYPE:
        return result.booleanValue;
    default:
        var nodes = [];
        var node;
        while (node = result.iterateNext())
            nodes.push(node);
        return nodes;
    }
}

We got a similar output in stable versions of Safari and Firefox. As far as we can tell, the $x variable is not attached to the global window object.

What is $x, and what's it used for?

2 Answers 2

13

That's an XPath utility function. From the fine Firebug manual:

$x(xpath)
Returns an array of elements that match the given XPath expression.

And from the fine Chrome manual:

$x(xpath)
Returns an array of DOM elements that match the given XPath expression.

The $x function isn't part of JavaScript itself, it is just a utility that's available in the console. If you try to access $x outside the console (http://jsfiddle.net/ambiguous/fsewU/), you'll get a ReferenceError unless, of course, you've defined your own $x somewhere.

1

Looks to be related to the XPath (XML Path Language)....A helper of sorts...I found a link which may assist you.. http://userscripts.org/topics/26131 Hope that helps..

1
  • +1. for what it's worth, Firebug in Firefox also does the same thing with $x.
    – Spudley
    May 19, 2012 at 9:52

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