I've ran into some really weird behavior with javascript today. I think I got it somehow figured out now, but I'd like to know if what I think is going on is really happening or if there is some other magic involved. So this is my code:
var SomeObject = {};
SomeObject.foo = function(a, b) {
var baz = this.bar(a, b);
console.log(baz);
console.log(baz.left);
SomeObject.magicalStuff(baz);
};
SomeObject.bar = function(a, b) {
return {left: a-b, top: b-a};
};
SomeObject.magicalStuff = function(position) {
position.left = 0;
};
SomeObject.foo(100, 50);
The output of this is something like (depending on the browser):
> Object
50
If you expand the "Object" (in Chrome, Safari or Firefox (Firebug) what you get is:
> Object
left: 0
top: -50
Whereas I would expect:
> Object
left: 50
top: -50
What I think is going on is that console.log() really just "posts" a reference to the console, which gets read once you click on the "expand" symbol. But doesn't that kind of defeat the purpose of console.log() as a debugging instrument? I always expected console.log() to "snapshot" the stuff I pass to it. It is really surprising to see a statement which comes after the actual console.log() change the output of that very console.log() call.
Or is there something else going on?
Edit: I'm also wondering if there is a sound reason for browser developers to implement console.log like this (I guess there is one, otherwise it wouldn't be consistent across major browsers).