2

console in IE 11

enter image description here

console in Chrome

enter image description here

If I change word 'item' in the loop to 'anotherItem' like this

var obj = {
    id1: 'item 1',
    id2: 'item 2',
    id3: 'item 3'    
};
for (anotherItem in obj){
    console.log(anotherItem);
}

The cycle works fine

Why IE 11 does not process word 'item'

2
  • You should write the code in your question, not as an image like you attached in the question. Jun 6, 2017 at 12:58
  • for (var item in obj){ console.log(item); } should work as expected Jun 6, 2017 at 13:00

2 Answers 2

9

item is defined as a native function in IE, and is probably read-only, and therefore is the reason you cannot change it's value.

Prior to Edge, Microsoft didn't like adhering to standards, and introduced all sorts of features that aren't in the standards. The item function is not present in Edge.

Also, you haven't declared anotherItem, try this:

Try this:

var obj = {
    id1: 'item 1',
    id2: 'item 2',
    id3: 'item 3'    
};

for (var anotherItem in obj){
    console.log(anotherItem);
}

If you don't declare a variable with the var keywork, and you're not in strict-mode, it will be defined as a global variable (which is not what you want). Global variables are essentially properties on the global object, and in the context of a web browser, that'd be the window object.

Add the following to the top of your JS file to enable strict mode, and then you won't be able to make these mistakes in the first place as an exception will be thrown.

"use strict";

You can also choose to enable strict mode for specific functions, like this:

(function() {
    "use strict";
    // code here is in strict mode
})()
2
  • Maybe I did not quite correctly put the question, but I realized that it is native, but I did not understand why they did so and for what it answers Jun 6, 2017 at 12:51
  • Microsoft was terrible at following web standards prior to Edge. That'll be the reason for the random function that no other browsers have.
    – thephpdev
    Jun 6, 2017 at 12:53
0

you can use this example for old browsers. good luck.

var fruits = ["apple", "orange", "cherry"];
fruits.forEach(myFunction);

function myFunction(item, index) {
   document.getElementById("demo").innerHTML += index + ":" + item + "<br>";
}
1
  • OP was asking about iterating through properties of an object rather than elements of an array. Jan 14, 2021 at 1:12

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.