I know it is used to make arguments
a real Array
, but I don‘t understand what happens when using Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments);
.
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2^ slightly different since that link asks about DOM nodes and and not arguments. And i think the answer here is much better by describing what 'this' is internally.– sqramCommented Oct 13, 2015 at 14:12
15 Answers
What happens under the hood is that when .slice()
is called normally, this
is an Array, and then it just iterates over that Array, and does its work.
How is this
in the .slice()
function an Array? Because when you do:
object.method();
...the object
automatically becomes the value of this
in the method()
. So with:
[1,2,3].slice()
...the [1,2,3]
Array is set as the value of this
in .slice()
.
But what if you could substitute something else as the this
value? As long as whatever you substitute has a numeric .length
property, and a bunch of properties that are numeric indices, it should work. This type of object is often called an array-like object.
The .call()
and .apply()
methods let you manually set the value of this
in a function. So if we set the value of this
in .slice()
to an array-like object, .slice()
will just assume it's working with an Array, and will do its thing.
Take this plain object as an example.
var my_object = {
'0': 'zero',
'1': 'one',
'2': 'two',
'3': 'three',
'4': 'four',
length: 5
};
This is obviously not an Array, but if you can set it as the this
value of .slice()
, then it will just work, because it looks enough like an Array for .slice()
to work properly.
var sliced = Array.prototype.slice.call( my_object, 3 );
Example: http://jsfiddle.net/wSvkv/
As you can see in the console, the result is what we expect:
['three','four'];
So this is what happens when you set an arguments
object as the this
value of .slice()
. Because arguments
has a .length
property and a bunch of numeric indices, .slice()
just goes about its work as if it were working on a real Array.
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9Great answer! But sadly you can't convert just any object this way, if your object keys are string values, like in actual words.. This will fail, so keep your objects content as '0':'value' and not like 'stringName':'value'. Commented Apr 9, 2013 at 14:45
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6@Michael: Reading source code of the open source JS implementations is possible, but it's simpler to just refer to the "ECMAScript" language specification. Here's a link to the
Array.prototype.slice
method description.– user1106925Commented May 29, 2013 at 12:07 -
1since object keys has no order, this specific demonstration might fail in other browsers. not all vendors sort their objects' keys by order of creation.– vsyncCommented Feb 21, 2014 at 10:08
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4@vsync: It's the
for-in
statement that doesn't guarantee order. The algorithm used by.slice()
defines a numeric order starting with0
and ending (non-inclusive) with the.length
of the given object (or Array or whatever). So the order is guaranteed to be consistent across all implementations. Commented Jun 16, 2014 at 21:39 -
9@vsync: It isn't an assumption. You can get order from any object if you enforce it. Let's say I have
var obj = {2:"two", 0:"zero", 1: "one"}
. If we usefor-in
to enumerate the object, there's no guarantee of order. But if we usefor
, we can manually enforce the order:for (var i = 0; i < 3; i++) { console.log(obj[i]); }
. Now we know that the properties of the object will be reached in the ascending numeric order we defined by ourfor
loop. That's what.slice()
does. It doesn't care if it has an actual Array. It just starts at0
and accesses properties in an ascending loop. Commented Jun 18, 2014 at 2:51
The arguments
object is not actually an instance of an Array, and does not have any of the Array methods. So, arguments.slice(...)
will not work because the arguments object does not have the slice method.
Arrays do have this method, and because the arguments
object is very similar to an array, the two are compatible. This means that we can use array methods with the arguments object. And since array methods were built with arrays in mind, they will return arrays rather than other argument objects.
So why use Array.prototype
? The Array
is the object which we create new arrays from (new Array()
), and these new arrays are passed methods and properties, like slice. These methods are stored in the [Class].prototype
object. So, for efficiency sake, instead of accessing the slice method by (new Array()).slice.call()
or [].slice.call()
, we just get it straight from the prototype. This is so we don't have to initialise a new array.
But why do we have to do this in the first place? Well, as you said, it converts an arguments object into an Array instance. The reason why we use slice, however, is more of a "hack" than anything. The slice method will take a, you guessed it, slice of an array and return that slice as a new array. Passing no arguments to it (besides the arguments object as its context) causes the slice method to take a complete chunk of the passed "array" (in this case, the arguments object) and return it as a new array.
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You may want to use a slice for reasons described here: jspatterns.com/arguments-considered-harmful– KooiIncCommented Aug 14, 2011 at 13:45
Normally, calling
var b = a.slice();
will copy the array a
into b
. However, we can’t do
var a = arguments.slice();
because arguments
doesn’t have slice
as a method (it’s not a real array).
Array.prototype.slice
is the slice
function for arrays. .call
runs this slice
function, with the this
value set to arguments
.
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2thanx but why use
prototype
? isn'tslice
a nativeArray
method?– ilyoCommented Aug 14, 2011 at 13:08 -
4Note that
Array
is a constructor function, and the corresponding "class" isArray.prototype
. You can also use[].slice
Commented Aug 14, 2011 at 13:13 -
4IlyaD,
slice
is a method of eachArray
instance, but not theArray
constructor function. You useprototype
to access methods of a constructor's theoretical instances. Commented Aug 14, 2011 at 13:16 -
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Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments) is the old-fashioned way to convert an arguments into an array.
In ECMAScript 2015, you can use Array.from or the spread operator:
let args = Array.from(arguments);
let args = [...arguments];
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Do you mean that Array.slice.call(1,2) returns the value [1,2]? Why is it called "call" instead of "argsToArray"? Doesn't "call" mean to call a function? Commented May 30, 2021 at 20:48
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I see. Call means to call the function slice(), which is to an array what substr is to a string. Yes? Commented Jul 2, 2021 at 20:05
First, you should read how function invocation works in JavaScript. I suspect that alone is enough to answer your question. But here's a summary of what is happening:
Array.prototype.slice
extracts the slice
method from Array
's prototype. But calling it directly won't work, as it's a method (not a function) and therefore requires a context (a calling object, this
), otherwise it would throw Uncaught TypeError: Array.prototype.slice called on null or undefined
.
The call()
method allows you to specify a method's context, basically making these two calls equivalent:
someObject.slice(1, 2);
slice.call(someObject, 1, 2);
Except the former requires the slice
method to exist in someObject
's prototype chain (as it does for Array
), whereas the latter allows the context (someObject
) to be manually passed to the method.
Also, the latter is short for:
var slice = Array.prototype.slice;
slice.call(someObject, 1, 2);
Which is the same as:
Array.prototype.slice.call(someObject, 1, 2);
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Why would one use .call() instead of bind()? Are they different? Commented May 30, 2021 at 20:45
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// We can apply `slice` from `Array.prototype`:
Array.prototype.slice.call([]); //-> []
// Since `slice` is available on an array's prototype chain,
'slice' in []; //-> true
[].slice === Array.prototype.slice; //-> true
// … we can just invoke it directly:
[].slice(); //-> []
// `arguments` has no `slice` method
'slice' in arguments; //-> false
// … but we can apply it the same way:
Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments); //-> […]
// In fact, though `slice` belongs to `Array.prototype`,
// it can operate on any array-like object:
Array.prototype.slice.call({0: 1, length: 1}); //-> [1]
Its because, as MDN notes
The arguments object is not an array. It is similar to an array, but does not have any array properties except length. For example, it does not have the pop method. However it can be converted to a real array:
Here we are calling slice
on the native object Array
and not on its implementation and thats why the extra .prototype
var args = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments);
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Don't understand. Isn't Array the name of a class? Then calling a static method of the Array should be the same as calling the same method in Array.prototype, no? Commented May 30, 2021 at 20:50
Dont forget, that a low-level basics of this behaviour is the type-casting that integrated in JS-engine entirely.
Slice just takes object (thanks to existing arguments.length property) and returns array-object casted after doing all operations on that.
The same logics you can test if you try to treat String-method with an INT-value:
String.prototype.bold.call(11); // returns "<b>11</b>"
And that explains statement above.
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I tried this, and omitting the "prototype." results in an undefined error. Why? Doesn't the prototype hold all the methods, so they can be inherited by new objects? Commented May 30, 2021 at 20:54
It uses the slice
method arrays have and calls it with its this
being the arguments
object. This means it calls it as if you did arguments.slice()
assuming arguments
had such a method.
Creating a slice without any arguments will simply take all elements - so it simply copies the elements from arguments
to an array.
Array.prototype.slice=function(start,end){
let res=[];
start=start||0;
end=end||this.length
for(let i=start;i<end;i++){
res.push(this[i])
}
return res;
}
when you do:
Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments)
arguments
becomes the value of this
in slice
,and then slice
returns an array
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You didn't say what the "call" is for. What function is call calling? Commented May 30, 2021 at 20:56
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I think it is calling "slice" which is supposed to be a function (like substr for strings) but is represented as an object. Yes? Commented Jul 2, 2021 at 20:06
Let's assume you have: function.apply(thisArg, argArray )
The apply method invokes a function, passing in the object that will be bound to this and an optional array of arguments.
The slice() method selects a part of an array, and returns the new array.
So when you call Array.prototype.slice.apply(arguments, [0])
the array slice method is invoked (bind) on arguments.
when .slice() is called normally, this is an Array, and then it just iterates over that Array, and does its work.
//ARGUMENTS
function func(){
console.log(arguments);//[1, 2, 3, 4]
//var arrArguments = arguments.slice();//Uncaught TypeError: undefined is not a function
var arrArguments = [].slice.call(arguments);//cp array with explicity THIS
arrArguments.push('new');
console.log(arrArguments)
}
func(1,2,3,4)//[1, 2, 3, 4, "new"]
Maybe a bit late, but the answer to all of this mess is that call() is used in JS for inheritance. If we compare this to Python or PHP, for example, call is used respectively as super().init() or parent::_construct().
This is an example of its usage that clarifies all:
function Teacher(first, last, age, gender, interests, subject) {
Person.call(this, first, last, age, gender, interests);
this.subject = subject;
}
Reference: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Learn/JavaScript/Objects/Inheritance
/*
arguments: get all args data include Length .
slice : clone Array
call: Convert Object which include Length to Array
Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments):
1. Convert arguments to Array
2. Clone Array arguments
*/
//normal
function abc1(a,b,c){
console.log(a);
}
//argument
function: function abc2(){
console.log(Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments,0,1))
}
abc1('a','b','c');
//a
abc2('a','b','c');
//a
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It is better if you can provide some context to your answer so that others who go through your answer can easily understand the solution provided by you easily. Commented Apr 16, 2021 at 5:55
When you think of .call
(or .bind, or .apply), think of reusability. You want to reuse a function instead of writing it from scratch. Therefore:
The goal with
Array.prototype.slice(arguments)
is just lending the slice functionality to thearguments
object (which is not an array and doesn't have its own.slice
).If you don't use
.call
, thethis
reference inside the slice function won't work properly (because it will point to nothing).So when you do
Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments)
you're reusing the slice function and instructing the runtime as to which object to use as context.
Try this (teaching a cat meow):
function Dog () {
this.sound = 'rofl'
}
Dog.prototype.getSound = function () {
console.log(this.sound)
}
function Cat () {
this.sound = 'meow'
}
const whiskers = new Cat();
Dog.prototype.getSound(whiskers); // undefined
Dog.prototype.getSound.call(whiskers); // "meow"