312
votes

What "Hidden Features" of JavaScript do you think every programmer should know?

After having seen the excellent quality of the answers to the following questions I thought it was time to ask it for JavaScript.

Even though JavaScript is arguably the most important Client Side language right now (just ask Google) it's surprising how little most web developers appreciate how powerful it really is.

6
  • 1
    Didn't you mean "Having seen the rep. points and views this other question attracted, I thought I'd ask almost exactly the same question to boost my own"? ;-)
    – Bobby Jack
    Sep 14, 2008 at 18:22
  • 1
    Sure, pessimist. :) I'd considered making this a community question. Also, after you get a certain number of points it's all diminishing returns. Sep 14, 2008 at 18:37
  • 1
    Fair enough - it doesn't look as if you 'need' the rep! I guess I just have a big issue with the C# one - doesn't exactly seem to me like the type of question for which this site was intended.
    – Bobby Jack
    Sep 14, 2008 at 18:41
  • 3
    Yeah, maybe not, but I found the knowledge in the answers great. I think you'd be hard pressed to expose an average C# programmer to all of it in one place if not for SO. It'd take years of playing with it to come up with the same hard won list. Sep 14, 2008 at 18:54
  • 7
    I've been writing JavaScript professionally for 10 years now and I learned a thing or three from this thread. Thanks, Alan! Sep 20, 2008 at 7:39

99 Answers 99

21
votes

Timestamps in JavaScript:

// Usual Way
var d = new Date();
timestamp = d.getTime();

// Shorter Way
timestamp = (new Date()).getTime();

// Shortest Way
timestamp = +new Date();
9
  • Shortestest way: timestamp=+new Date; Sep 22, 2008 at 9:20
  • 14
    The shortest way is clever but hard to understand, as one might think you wanted to write += but mistakenly wrote =+ Mar 9, 2009 at 10:12
  • @Rene: Argh. I even got confused by your own statement, and 'fixed' the answer... Jul 8, 2009 at 14:10
  • Even shorter / less cryptic: just use "timestamp = new Date();". You can subtract timestamps because they have a valueOf() function that yields the integer timestamp. If you want to use the timestamp as an integer, either use "+timestamp" (short but cryptic) or "timestamp.valueOf()".
    – Jason S
    Sep 22, 2009 at 23:54
  • 2
    Of course, with proper formatting / spacing, such ambiguity is avoided. Why is it so freaking hard to use proper spacing? Do NOT write "timestamp=+new Date();", of course that's confusing. Instead, write "timestamp = +new Date();".
    – ken
    Jan 14, 2010 at 19:13
20
votes

You can assign local variables using [] on the left hand side. Comes in handy if you want to return more than one value from a function without creating a needless array.

function fn(){
    var cat = "meow";
    var dog = "woof";
    return [cat,dog];
};

var [cat,dog] = fn();  // Handy!

alert(cat);
alert(dog);

It's part of core JS but somehow I never realized till this year.

5
  • not supported by IE, except this small issue this is an interesting feature.
    – Kamarey
    Sep 22, 2009 at 19:56
  • 12
    This is "destructuring assignment"; I believe it's only supported in Firefox versions running JavaScript 1.7 and later. It definitely causes an error in Opera 10 and Chrome 3 as well as IE. See developer.mozilla.org/en/…
    – NickFitz
    Oct 8, 2009 at 11:16
  • I'd love to see syntax like this in more languages, like C#.
    – Greg
    Jan 1, 2010 at 0:07
  • 3
    In the meantime, this is pretty much as good: function fn(){ return {cat:"meow",dog:"woof"}; // Handy! }; var snd = fn(); alert(snd.cat); alert(snd.dog);
    – Plynx
    Feb 19, 2010 at 22:46
  • not working in Chrome >15 w >JS 1.6, otherwise this would have been the biggest amazement. I even tries that once, trying to emulate PHP's list(...) Oct 26, 2011 at 21:39
19
votes

All objects in Javascript are implemented as hashtables, so their properties can be accessed through the indexer and vice-versa. Also, you can enumerate all the properties using the for/in operator:

var x = {a: 0};
x["a"]; //returns 0

x["b"] = 1;
x.b; //returns 1

for (p in x) document.write(p+";"); //writes "a;b;"
3
  • 2
    Also, property names are strings, and if the string has a character that prevents it from being used through the dot notation, it can be accessed through the index notation. For example, an object property x['funky prop'] could not be accessed as x.funky prop; x['funky.prop'] cannot be accessed as x.funky.prop;
    – BarelyFitz
    Jun 1, 2009 at 1:03
  • 4
    Just do not forget to check the property names with "object.hasOwnProperty(propertyName)" before using them from the for-in loop or else you'll experience some unwanted stuff ;)
    – BYK
    Jun 21, 2009 at 21:59
  • @Beska: I think the elaboration would be thus: for (p in x) if (x.hasOwnProperty(p)) document.write(p+";"); This gets around issues where adding new properties to x's prototype would cause in to enumerate over them also, which may not be the desired behaviour.
    – shuckster
    Jul 31, 2009 at 11:59
17
votes

When you want to remove an element from an array, one can use the delete operator, as such:

var numbers = [1,2,3,4,5];
delete numbers[3];
//numbers is now [1,2,3,undefined,5]

As you can see, the element was removed, but a hole was left in the array since the element was replaced with an undefined value.

Thus, to work around this problem, instead of using delete, use the splice array method...as such:

var numbers = [1,2,3,4,5];
numbers.splice(3,1);
//numbers is now [1,2,3,5]

The first argument of splice is an ordinal in the array [index], and the second is the number of elements to delete.

0
17
votes

There are several answers in this thread showing how to extend the Array object via its prototype. This is a BAD IDEA, because it breaks the for (i in a) statement.

So is it okay if you don't happen to use for (i in a) anywhere in your code? Well, only if your own code is the only code that you are running, which is not too likely inside a browser. I'm afraid that if folks start extending their Array objects like this, Stack Overflow will start overflowing with a bunch of mysterious JavaScript bugs.

See helpful details here.

7
  • 18
    You shouldn't iterate over an array with for..in at all! Use the standard for() loop or the new forEach() method for arrays, and for..in strictly for iterating over object properties.
    – Zilk
    Oct 28, 2008 at 21:45
  • 6
    Try to convince existing code of this advice ;)
    – Chris Noe
    Oct 28, 2008 at 22:31
  • 3
    for( x in y) has never worked properly for arrays for me. I learned very quickly to use the long form of a for loop. I wouldn't let any code that uses for(in) on an array anywhere near any of my work. There's plenty of actual decent well written code I could use instead.
    – Breton
    Jan 29, 2009 at 5:28
  • 5
    You just do not know JavaScript enough. It does not break the for-in loops, you construct them improperly. You have to check all the properties with "yourObject.hasOwnProperty(propertyName)" when you are iterating via for-in.
    – BYK
    Jun 21, 2009 at 22:06
  • 3
    @statictype.org - yeah, it's not - that's the point. Just use an index var for iteration instead.
    – harto
    Jul 21, 2009 at 23:29
16
votes

In a function, you can return the function itself:

function showSomething(a){
   alert(a);
   return arguments.callee;
}

// Alerts: 'a', 'b', 'c'
showSomething('a')('b')('c');

// Or what about this:
(function (a){
   alert(a);
   return arguments.callee;
}​)('a')('b')('c');​​​​

I don't know when it could be useful, anyway, it's pretty weird and fun:

var count = function(counter){
   alert(counter);
   if(counter < 10){
      return arguments.callee(counter+1);
   }
   return arguments.callee;
};

count(5)(9); // Will alert 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 and 9, 10

Actually, the FAB framework for Node.js seems to have implemented this feature; see this topic for example.

0
15
votes

The way JavaScript works with Date() just excites me!

function isLeapYear(year) {
    return (new Date(year, 1, 29, 0, 0).getMonth() != 2);
}

This is really "hidden feature".

Edit: Removed "?" condition as suggested in comments for politcorrecteness. Was: ... new Date(year, 1, 29, 0, 0).getMonth() != 2 ? true : false ... Please look at comments for details.

7
  • It's also overly complicated. I can't understand how anybody can write cond ? true : false (or vice-versa) and not notice how idiotic that is. Sep 17, 2008 at 19:08
  • Just for clarity, the line should be return !(new Date(year, 1, 29, 0, 0).getMonth() == 2); Or, really, it should be return new Date(year, 1, 29, 0, 0).getMonth() != 2; Sep 22, 2008 at 21:52
  • In fact this notation isn't so idiotic as it may look, when 'undefined' results may be involved in further data. I took this example from a really working system, and changing this to "Politically Correct" form brakes the system totally :)
    – Thevs
    Sep 27, 2008 at 15:18
  • @Thevs: I don't get how changing the form in this case would break anything. Both the old code and the new code seem to return real booleans (true/false) instead of merely returning objects which may or may not be truthy.
    – jsight
    Oct 1, 2008 at 16:53
  • You are right. My mistake. It was "? 1 : 0" in my original code, and then return value had been added to 28 to determine a day count in February. Changing it to return boolean vlaue broke my code. In case of "? false: true" both code fragments are equivalent.
    – Thevs
    Oct 2, 2008 at 10:38
13
votes

My favorite trick is using apply to perform a callback to an object's method and maintain the correct "this" variable.

function MakeCallback(obj, method) {
    return function() {
        method.apply(obj, arguments);
    };
}

var SomeClass = function() { 
     this.a = 1;
};
SomeClass.prototype.addXToA = function(x) {
     this.a = this.a + x;
};

var myObj = new SomeClass();

brokenCallback = myObj.addXToA;
brokenCallback(1); // Won't work, wrong "this" variable
alert(myObj.a); // 1


var myCallback = MakeCallback(myObj, myObj.addXToA);
myCallback(1);  // Works as expected because of apply
alert(myObj.a); // 2
13
votes

Here's a couple of shortcuts:

var a = []; // equivalent to new Array()
var o = {}; // equivalent to new Object()
2
  • with var a = []; , you cannot create arrays of specified size. You will have to utilize var a = new Array(arraySize);
    – Rajat
    Jan 7, 2010 at 19:20
  • 1
    Is there a measurable performance advantage to declaring an Array in JavaScript with a specified size?
    – travis
    Jan 7, 2010 at 23:46
13
votes

The Zen of Closures

Other people have mentioned closures. But it's surprising how many people know about closures, write code using closures, yet still have the wrong perception of what closures really are. Some people confuse first-class functions with closures. Yet others see it as a kind of static variable.

To me a closure is a kind of 'private' global variable. That is, a kind of variable that some functions see as global but other functions can't see. Now, I know this is playing fast and loose with the description of the underlying mechanism but that is how it feels like and behaves. To illustrate:

// Say you want three functions to share a single variable:

// Use a self-calling function to create scope:
(function(){

    var counter = 0; // this is the variable we want to share;

    // Declare global functions using function expressions:
    increment = function(){
        return ++counter;
    }
    decrement = function(){
        return --counter;
    }
    value = function(){
        return counter;
    }
})()

now the three function increment, decrement and value share the variable counter without counter being an actual global variable. This is the true nature of closures:

increment();
increment();
decrement();
alert(value()); // will output 1

The above is not a really useful use of closures. In fact, I'd say that using it this way is an anti-pattern. But it is useful in understanding the nature of closures. For example, most people get caught when they try to do something like the following:

for (var i=1;i<=10;i++) {
    document.getElementById('span'+i).onclick = function () {
        alert('this is span number '+i);
    }
}
// ALL spans will generate alert: this span is span number 10

That's because they don't understand the nature of closures. They think that they are passing the value of i into the functions when in fact the functions are sharing a single variable i. Like I said before, a special kind of global variable.

To get around this you need detach* the closure:

function makeClickHandler (j) {
    return function () {alert('this is span number '+j)};
}

for (var i=1;i<=10;i++) {
    document.getElementById('span'+i).onclick = makeClickHandler(i);
}
// this works because i is passed by reference 
// (or value in this case, since it is a number)
// instead of being captured by a closure

*note: I don't know the correct terminology here.

1
  • This is a very useful post, thanks. Just a minor nitpick. In the for loop, it should be i=1, not i=i. Also, I couldn't get the workaround to work. Maybe you meant this instead: function makeClickHandler(j) { return function() { alert('this is span number ' + j); }; }
    – Steve
    Jun 4, 2010 at 16:51
12
votes

You never have to use eval() to assemble global variable names.

That is, if you have several globals (for whatever reason) named spec_grapes, spec_apples, you do not have to access them with eval("spec_" + var).

All globals are members of window[], so you can do window["spec_" + var].

7
  • Also you can shorten "if (typeof myvar != 'undefined')" to "if (window.myvar)"
    – BarelyFitz
    Jun 1, 2009 at 1:19
  • 7
    Remember this is only on a browser's javascript engine. You could be running a stand alone Javascript engine. Server-side javascript anyone? -- Just nitpicking, I know... Jun 30, 2009 at 13:29
  • @voyager: I agree - jaxer.org is COOL! Sep 22, 2009 at 21:00
  • 1
    @BarelyFitz: Not true. The variable window.myvar could have any of the following values: 0, false, "", null, or NaN. (there may be others but I think I've covered them.)
    – Jason S
    Sep 22, 2009 at 23:34
  • function getGlobal() { return (function inner() { return this; })(); }; - even 'apply', 'call' and prototype shenanigans can't make that not return the global scope (which on the web is 'window') Dec 30, 2009 at 3:55
11
votes

JavaScript uses a simple object literal:

var x = { intValue: 5, strValue: "foo" };

This constructs a full-fledged object.

JavaScript uses prototype-based object orientation and provides the ability to extend types at runtime:

String.prototype.doubleLength = function() {
    return this.length * 2;
}

alert("foo".doubleLength());

An object delegates all access to attributes that it doesn't contain itself to its "prototype", another object. This can be used to implement inheritance, but is actually more powerful (even if more cumbersome):

/* "Constructor" */
function foo() {
    this.intValue = 5;
}

/* Create the prototype that includes everything
 * common to all objects created be the foo function.
 */
foo.prototype = {
    method: function() {
        alert(this.intValue);
    }
}

var f = new foo();
f.method();
1
  • 1
    Weird that no one thought of JSON !? Sep 15, 2008 at 21:12
11
votes

Prevent annoying errors while testing in Internet Explorer when using console.log() for Firebug:

function log(message) {
    (console || { log: function(s) { alert(s); }).log(message);
}
2
  • 2
    it has nothing to do with the language... :)
    – gblazex
    Jul 10, 2010 at 10:49
  • 3
    "function(s) { alert(s); }" can simply be replaced by "alert"
    – mickael9
    Aug 14, 2010 at 4:00
10
votes

One of my favorites is constructor type checking:

function getObjectType( obj ) {  
    return obj.constructor.name;  
}  

window.onload = function() {  
    alert( getObjectType( "Hello World!" ) );  
    function Cat() {  
        // some code here...  
    }  
    alert( getObjectType( new Cat() ) );  
}

So instead of the tired old [Object object] you often get with the typeof keyword, you can actually get real object types based upon the constructor.

Another one is using variable arguments as a way to "overload" functions. All you are doing is using an expression to detect the number of arguments and returning overloaded output:

function myFunction( message, iteration ) {  
    if ( arguments.length == 2 ) {  
        for ( i = 0; i < iteration; i++ ) {  
            alert( message );  
        }  
    } else {  
        alert( message );  
    }  
}  

window.onload = function() {  
    myFunction( "Hello World!", 3 );  
}

Finally, I would say assignment operator shorthand. I learned this from the source of the jQuery framework... the old way:

var a, b, c, d;
b = a;
c = b;
d = c;

The new (shorthand) way:

var a, b, c, d;
d = c = b = a;

Good fun :)

1
  • It's not a good idea to rely on the constructor property, since it's mutable, it's not reliable. Once you start playing with with the prototype property it gets real easy to destroy the value of .constructor
    – Breton
    Jan 29, 2009 at 5:31
10
votes

The fastest loops in JavaScript are while(i--) ones. In all browsers. So if it's not that important for order in which elements of your loop get processed you should be using while(i--) form:

var names = new Array(1024), i = names.length;
while(i--)
  names[i] = "John" + i;

Also, if you have to use for() loop going forward, remember always to cache .length property:

var birds = new Array(1024); 
for(var i = 0, j = birds.length; i < j; i++)
  birds[i].fly();

To join large strings use Arrays (it's faster):

var largeString = new Array(1024), i = largeString.length;
while(i--) {
  // It's faster than for() loop with largeString.push(), obviously :)
  largeString[i] = i.toString(16);
}

largeString = largeString.join("");

It's much faster than largeString += "something" inside an loop.

2
  • I've been using the for-loop variant of your while(i--) for some time now: for (var i=names.length;i--;) {...
    – slebetman
    Jan 11, 2010 at 14:00
  • 2
    I don't agree. In firefox, (function(){var a=new Array(10000),i=10000;while(--i){a[i]=i}})() takes about 7 milliseconds whereas (function(){var a=new Array(10000);for(var i=0;i<10000;i++){a[i]=i}})() takes about 2 milliseconds.
    – tmim
    Aug 6, 2010 at 10:46
10
votes

You can do almost anything between parentheses if you separate statements with commas:

var z = ( x = "can you do crazy things with parenthesis", ( y = x.split(" "), [ y[1], y[0] ].concat( y.slice(2) ) ).join(" ") )

alert(x + "\n" + y + "\n" + z)

Output:

can you do crazy things with parenthesis
can,you,do,crazy,things,with,parenthesis
you can do crazy things with parenthesis
2
  • 7
    You can, but I'm pretty sure every sane JavaScript guy would want you drawn and quartered. Sep 22, 2008 at 13:01
  • 2
    If you want it really obscure in an obfuscator, use Chinese or other unicode characters: function 喂(我) {alert(我)};
    – some
    Nov 19, 2008 at 18:47
9
votes

The concept of truthy and falsy values. You don't need to do something like

if(someVar === undefined || someVar === null) ...

Simply do:

if(!someVar).

Every value has a corresponding boolean representation.

2
  • 9
    You need to be careful with this one. Zero and the empty string convert to false as well. Sep 22, 2008 at 9:25
  • 2
    as a corollary, you should use if (!!x) to check for 'truthiness' instead of if (x)
    – HS.
    Jul 18, 2009 at 12:45
9
votes

Function statements and function expressions are handled differently.

function blarg(a) {return a;} // statement
bleep = function(b) {return b;} //expression

All function statements are parsed before code is run - a function at the bottom of a JavaScript file will be available in the first statement. On the other hand, it won't be able to take advantage of certain dynamic context, such as surrounding with statements - the with hasn't been executed when the function is parsed.

Function expressions execute inline, right where they are encountered. They aren't available before that time, but they can take advantage of dynamic context.

9
votes

window.name's value persists across page changes, can be read by the parent window if in same domain (if in an iframe, use document.getElementById("your frame's ID").contentWindow.name to access it), and is limited only by available memory.

9
votes

The parentheses are optional when creating new "objects".

function Animal () {

}

var animal = new Animal();
var animal = new Animal;

Same thing.

3
  • is that part of ECMAScript or just the Mozilla Spidermonkey engine? (it works with the Spidermonkey shell)
    – Jason S
    Sep 22, 2009 at 23:24
  • not sure, I've just taken advantage of this assumption for some time now. works in IE, IIS too
    – David
    Sep 23, 2009 at 16:19
  • 2
    I like to leave the parentheses there because it reminds me that you are actually calling a function (and 'new' makes it implicitly return 'this').
    – Nick
    Jul 25, 2010 at 15:37
8
votes

Javascript has static variables inside functions:

function someFunction(){
  var Static = arguments.callee;
  Static.someStaticVariable = (Static.someStaticVariable || 0) + 1;
  alert(Static.someStaticVariable);
}
someFunction() //Alerts 1
someFunction() //Alerts 2
someFunction() //Alerts 3

It also has static variables inside Objects:

function Obj(){
  this.Static = arguments.callee;
}
a = new Obj();
a.Static.name = "a";
b = new Obj();
alert(b.Static.name); //Alerts b
4
  • Nice! I had to take a triple take on this until I realized that you're defining a property on the function itself. I had to run alert(someFunction.someStaticVariable); for it to sink in. Sep 14, 2008 at 23:27
  • 3
    I think you're misrepresenting the ability of functions to have properties in general. What you say is technically true, but as a side effect to the functions being first order objects in the language.
    – levik
    Sep 16, 2008 at 15:08
  • 1
    Agreed, this is a little misleading. "arguments.callee" is simply a reference to the function that was called. In your second example, a.Static === b.Static === Obj
    – Josh
    Sep 22, 2008 at 11:36
  • Within the function body, you can just write someFunction.someStaticVariable instead of arguments.callee.someStaticVariable. Reads cleaner.
    – Srikumar
    Dec 4, 2011 at 10:55
8
votes

All functions are actually instances of the built-in Function type, which has a constructor that takes a string containing the function definition, so you can actually define functions at run-time by e.g., concatenating strings:

//e.g., createAddFunction("a","b") returns function(a,b) { return a+b; }
function createAddFunction(paramName1, paramName2)
 { return new Function( paramName1, paramName2
                       ,"return "+ paramName1 +" + "+ paramName2 +";");
 }

Also, for user-defined functions, Function.toString() returns the function definition as a literal string.

2
  • 3
    This usually isn't necessary, though. In your example, you could just say: return function(paramName1, paramName2) { return paramName1 + paramName2; }
    – JW.
    Sep 15, 2008 at 17:43
  • It was just a contrived example. It's still a nice little-known feature. You can create macros with this, though, like unwinding a loop. Sep 15, 2008 at 17:55
8
votes

You can execute an object's method on any object, regardless of whether it has that method or not. Of course it might not always work (if the method assumes the object has something it doesn't), but it can be extremely useful. For example:

function(){
    arguments.push('foo') // This errors, arguments is not a proper array and has no push method
    Array.prototype.push.apply(arguments, ['foo']) // Works!
}
2
  • I'm not sure if I love this usage or should be recoiling in fear!? :) Sep 22, 2008 at 13:00
  • also call - Array.prototype.push.call(arguments, 'foo' /*, arg2, arg3, etc*/); Dec 30, 2009 at 3:53
8
votes

The == operator has a very special property, that creates this disturbing equality (Yes, I know in other dynamic languages like Perl this behavior would be expected but JavaScript ususally does not try to be smart in comparisons):

>>> 1 == true
true
>>> 0 == false
true
>>> 2 == true
false
8
votes

let.

Counterpart to var's lack of block-scoping is let, introduced in JavaScript 1.7.

  • The let statement provides a way to associate values with variables within the scope of a block, without affecting the values of like-named variables outside the block.
  • The let expression lets you establish variables scoped only to a single expression.
  • The let definition defines variables whose scope is constrained to the block in which they're defined. This syntax is very much like the syntax used for var.
  • You can also use let to establish variables that exist only within the context of a for loop.
  function varTest() {
        var x = 31;
    if (true) {
      var x = 71;  // same variable!
      alert(x);  // 71
    }
    alert(x);  // 71
  }

  function letTest() {
    let x = 31;
    if (true) {
      let x = 71;  // different variable
      alert(x);  // 71
    }
    alert(x);  // 31
  }

As of 2008, JavaScript 1.7 is supported in FireFox 2.0+ and Safari 3.x.

8
votes

If you blindly eval() a JSON string to deserialize it, you may run into problems:

  1. It's not secure. The string may contain malicious function calls!
  2. If you don't enclose the JSON string in parentheses, property names can be mistaken as labels, resulting in unexpected behaviour or a syntax error:

    eval("{ \"foo\": 42 }"); // syntax error: invalid label
    eval("({ \"foo\": 42 })"); // OK
    
1
  • You shouldn't be using eval for JSON. Use JSON.parse() and JSON.stringify().
    – Srikumar
    Dec 4, 2011 at 10:48
8
votes

You can turn "any* object with integer properties, and a length property into an array proper, and thus endow it with all array methods such as push, pop, splice, map, filter, reduce, etc.

Array.prototype.slice.call({"0":"foo", "1":"bar", 2:"baz", "length":3 }) 

// returns ["foo", "bar", "baz"]

This works with jQuery objects, html collections, and Array objects from other frames (as one possible solution to the whole array type thing). I say, if it's got a length property, you can turn it into an array and it doesn't matter. There's lots of non array objects with a length property, beyond the arguments object.

8
votes

If you're attempting to sandbox javascript code, and disable every possible way to evaluate strings into javascript code, be aware that blocking all the obvious eval/document.write/new Function/setTimeout/setInterval/innerHTML and other DOM manipulations isn't enough.

Given any object o, o.constructor.constructor("alert('hi')")() will bring up an alert dialog with the word "hi" in it.

You could rewrite it as

var Z="constructor";
Z[Z][Z]("alert('hi')")();

Fun stuff.

2
  • This is more of a hidden "gotcha" than a hidden feature but it's extremely interesting considering I've tried to block things like eval before. Very interesting indeed :-) +1
    – JJ.
    Apr 29, 2010 at 14:33
  • 2
    You could usefully mention here that the -reason- for this is that the constructor of any object is always some function, and that the constructor of that function will always be Function - the function constructor which can construct functions from strings. Function(str) effectively returns function() { eval(str) }.
    – James Hart
    Aug 17, 2010 at 21:23
7
votes

Microsofts gift to JavaScript: AJAX

AJAXCall('http://www.abcd.com/')

function AJAXCall(url) {
 var client = new XMLHttpRequest();
 client.onreadystatechange = handlerFunc;
 client.open("GET", url);
 client.send();
}

function handlerFunc() {
 if(this.readyState == 4 && this.status == 200) {
 if(this.responseXML != null)
   document.write(this.responseXML)
 }
}
0
7
votes

The Module Pattern

<script type="text/javascript">
(function() {

function init() {
  // ...
}

window.onload = init;
})();
</script>

Variables and functions declared without the var statement or outside of a function will be defined in the global scope. If a variable/function of the same name already exists it will be silently overridden, which can lead to very hard to find errors. A common solution is to wrap the whole code body into an anonymous function and immediately execute it. This way all variables/functions are defined in the scope of the anonymous function and don't leak into the global scope.

To explicitly define a variable/function in the global scope they have to be prefixed with window:

window.GLOBAL_VAR = 12;
window.global_function = function() {};

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