The code:
var content = Array.prototype.map.call(document.getElementsByTagName("p"), function(e) {
return e.innerHTML;
});
It's from p. 367 of JavaScript: The Definitive Guide, 6th ed.
Here's what I think is happening in this code.
The variable content
is being assigned the result of a .map()
call on the NodeList
of paragraph tags returned by document.getElementsByTagName("p")
.
The .map()
method is accessed from the Array.prototype
, and its this
value is set to be the paragraph tag NodeList
using .call()
. Since .map()
applies a function that has access to item, index, array
, the e
in function(e)
is the item of the NodeList
.
So the content
variable ends up being comprised of the result of .innerHTML
calls on each of the Element
type Nodes
in the NodeList
made up of paragraph tags in the current document.
.innerHTML
will return the text of a given HTML element if it has no other nodes inside it. Otherwise it will return the HTML nodes inside it.
Is that correct? I've tried:
- Reading the MDN documentation on Function.prototype.call
- Searching Programmers SE I found Misunderstanding Scope, which I'm not certain how to interpret. It claims the MDN documentation is incomplete.
- Reading more in the Definitive book.
- Messing around in JSFiddle - the code acts as expected, I just want to know how it's doing what it does.
getElementsByTagName()
(aNodeList
) doesn't support Array methods: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/…