4

I'm reading the MDN Article on slice in JavaScript. I understand everything except the 2nd example in the section titled Array-Like Objects.

It says we can simplify the first example by making slice our own function as so:

var unboundSlice = Array.prototype.slice;
var slice = Function.prototype.call.bind(unboundSlice);

function list() {
  return slice(arguments);
}

var list1 = list(1, 2, 3); // [1, 2, 3]

What I don't understand is how call can come right after prototype on the second line.

I usually see it in the form of Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments) or something of that sort.

I don't understand the flow of the first two lines and how they generate this working slice function.

2
  • for what it's worth, you could also do var slice = Array.prototype.slice.call.bind(Array.prototype.slice); though the point of your example is that call doesn't necessarily have to belong to the slice function initially, and it isn't bound to any function until you bind it. May 21, 2016 at 23:07
  • 1
    Just as an object's toString method comes from Object.prototype.toString, a functions call method comes from Function.prototype.call. May 27, 2016 at 16:28

5 Answers 5

4

tl;dr:

var slice = Function.prototype.call.bind(unboundSlice);

is a short way of writing:

var slice = function(value, start, end) {
  return unboundSlice.call(value, start, end);
};

Let's think about this line for second:

Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments)

.slice is an array method to extract a subset of the array. It operates on the value of this. .call is a method every function has, it lets you set the this value for a function execution. So, the above line lets us execute slice as a method of arguments, without having to mutate arguments itself. We could have done

arguments.slice = Array.prototype.slice;
arguments.slice();

but that is not as clean.

Now looking at

Function.prototype.call.bind(unboundSlice);

As said, .call is a method that every function has. It also operates on this, which is expected to be a function. It calls this and sets the this value of that function to the first argument. You could think of call as being similar to

function call(thisValue, arg1, arg2, ...) {
   return this.apply(thisValue, [arg1, arg2, ...]);
}

Note how it calls this as a function.

.bind is also a method every function has. It returns a new function which has its this value fixed to the first argument you pass in.

Let's consider what the resulting function of call.bind(unboundSlice) would look like:

function boundCall(thisValue, arg1, arg2, ...) {
   return unboundSlice.apply(thisValue, [arg1, arg2, ...]);
}

We simply replaced this with unboundSlice. boundCall will now always call unboundSlice.

1
  • Thank you for your thorough explanation. I'll be reading through this many times. I feel like it's starting to click, it's only a matter of time.
    – qarthandso
    May 27, 2016 at 17:08
4

The MDN article for Function.prototype.call() helped me wrap my head around this.

The most simplistic way I can answer:

In javascript, a Function has a method called call. A function is an object, and all objects inherit methods and properties from their prototype.

So your example of Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments) shows you calling the call method on the slice function.

The second line in the code that you are confused about: var slice = Function.prototype.call.bind(unboundSlice); shows the call method belonging to the Function prototype.

Checkout JavaScript Prototypes if you are still confused.

1 Functions are objects.

2 "Every JavaScript object has a prototype."

3 "The prototype is also an object."

4 "All JavaScript objects inherit their properties and methods from their prototype."

In other words, back to the most simplistic way to answer this: In javascript, a Function has a method called call.

As for understanding what bind does, the that = this vs .bind example in this article helps make sense of what is going on.

If that was confusing, then make sure you understand context and scope

2

slice is a property of Array.prototype, and it expects its this object to be Array-like. You can use it on Array-like objects (that have a length property and have properties that you can index) that don't have their own slice function like so:

Array.prototype.slice.call(arraylikething);

That's a lot of typing, so we can make a function to do the same thing:

var slice = function(arraylikething){
    return Array.prototype.slice.call(arraylikething);
};

JavaScript provides Function.prototype.bind to bind functions to a specified this object. So we can accomplish the same thing a bit more easily:

var slice = Function.prototype.call.bind(Array.prototype.slice);

bind creates a new function that returns the result of call with its this object set to Array.prototype.slice, the same as what we did manually above, and equivalent to your code.

1

The answer from Chris Dillinger is correct and informative. But here's another way to think about it. You're being asked, in essence, to define

Function.prototype.call.bind(Array.prototype.slice)

Which you can look at this way:

fn.bind(context) 
    ==>  function(...args) {return context.fn(...args);} 
            // 1. definition of `bind` (oversimplified, but enough for this case)

fn.bind(unboundSlice) 
    ==>  function(...args) {return unboundSlice.fn(...args);}  
            // 2. substitute `unboundSlice` for `context`

Function.prototype.call.bind(unboundSlice)
    ==>  function(...args) {return unboundSlice[Function.prototype.call](...args);} 
            // 3. substitute `Function.prototype.call` for `fn`.

Function.prototype.call.bind(unboundSlice)
    ==>  function(...args) {return unboundSlice[.call(...args);} 
            // 4. walk the prototype chain

Function.prototype.call.bind(Array.prototype.slice)
    ==>  function(...args) {return Array.prototype.slice.call(...args);}
            // 5. substitue `Array.prototype.slice` for `unboundSlice`

The only step that's even slightly tricky is step 4, where you have to realize that all functions inherit the call method from their prototype chain, so invoking call on them is merely an alternative means of invoking the functions themselves.

1
  • Laying this out step by step really helped me grasp this. Thank you very much.
    – qarthandso
    May 28, 2016 at 15:33
0

In the first line, Array.prototype.slice (which is a method) is simply referenced via unboundSlice. You're essentially 'extracting' the slice method from Array.prototype.

In the second line, the same thing happens for Function.prototype.call, which is also a method of ALL functions. (it's defined in Function.prototype, and inherited by all functions).

Next, by using .bind(unboundSlice) the Call function's this value is bound to the reference to Array.prototype.slice, which essentially results in the same thing as Array.prototype.slice.call(), where call also has its this bound to slice, because of it being a method of it, AND because it's being called like that.

Lastly, the bound call method is referenced via var slice;

The general idea here is that you're able to use the functionality of an array method (slice) in another context (the global scope).

So now, instead of calling call when it was already a method of slice, you're binding slice to be the this value of call in order to achieve the same behaviour.

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