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
.
var slice = Array.prototype.slice.call.bind(Array.prototype.slice);
though the point of your example is thatcall
doesn't necessarily have to belong to theslice
function initially, and it isn't bound to any function until youbind
it.toString
method comes fromObject.prototype.toString
, a functionscall
method comes fromFunction.prototype.call
.