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I'm doing some work with the Parser API in Spidermonkey. The docs show that there's a binary operator ... Anybody have any idea what this is/does? I'd love to know. I've never seen it before. If I were forced to guess, I'd have to say it's something with E4X, but that's only because I know nothing about E4X.

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    two lines below the section in the linked doc with the .. says "Note: the .. operator is E4X-specific."
    – John Boker
    Nov 18, 2010 at 2:25

4 Answers 4

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Not to be confused with the decimal point and dot:

var val= 1000..toExponential()
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    This confused me for some time - it seemed to have the same effect as (1000).method() so I thought it was a special operator. The decimal didn't occur to me. Nice! Aug 16, 2011 at 16:33
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It is an E4X operator.

From https://developer.mozilla.org/en/Core_JavaScript_1.5_Guide:Processing_XML_with_E4X:

While the . operator accesses direct children of the given node, the .. operator accesses all children no matter how deeply nested:

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Something like:

255..toString(16);

First dot is actually a decimal point, just let JavaScript Compiler know the second dot wants to invoke property or method. And 255.toString(16) makes JavaScript Compiler confused(identifier starts immediately after decimal numeric literal).

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    Tip: the . operator has higher precedence than unary - or unary +, which convert their operands to Number. typeof(-255..toString()) is 'number'. That is, it is parsed as if it were typeof(-(255..toString())), effectively typeof(-(Number(255.toString()))). Feb 7, 2020 at 15:31
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It is indeed E4X. It does the same thing as the single dot operator, which selects children, but it selects all descendants. (It's by analogy with XPath's / operator selecting children of an element that match the selector and // selecting all descendants that match the selector.)

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