If I use:
1.09 * 1; // returns "1.09"
But if I use:
1,09 * 1; // returns "9"
I know that 1,09 isn't a number.
What does the comma do in the last piece of code?
More Examples
if (0,9) alert("ok"); // alert
if (9,0) alert("ok"); // don't alert
alert(1); alert(2); alert(3); // 3 alerts
alert(1), alert(2), alert(3); // 3 alerts too
alert("2",
foo = function (param) {
alert(param)
},
foo('1')
)
foo('3'); // alerts 1, 2 and 3
alert
takes only one argument. Anything after that is discarded.arguments
object instead, which can be of any length). Even with modern compiled JS, there would be no way to tell ahead of time how many arguments a function would take. Consider this:function test() { args=[]; for (var i = 0; i < arguments.length; i++) { args.push(arguments[i] + 1); } ;
The interpreter would have to know how the function was being used to know how many args it would take. Instead, it evaluates everything.