Utility classes only become a problem when you're in an "enterprise environment" with 25 years of rotten code built up and 12 different com.*.utils.StringUtils
@AwalGarg Extending things you don't own can cause naming collisions, primarily. In JS, a second risk is added because anything can be enumerated very easily, and without proper hasOwnProperty and related checks, you may end up with someone else's method.
My only problem with utility functions is readability, in comparison to other code. myDomEl.hide(), suits the rest of the code. Not so much with utility.hide(myDomEl)...
Yes, but if there is a naming collision (more likely on a common name like hide), you may not notice until your CDN updates and two scripts are delivered in reverse order.
(depending on how the scripts are included in the page)
It's good practice not to mutate anything you don't own, because if everyone does it, they will step on your toes.
It may work, but it's still not a good idea. What if a browser update locks the prototype for that object (or makes it native) and your extension now throws? What if those elements become ephemeral/weak references, and your extensions vanish?
You end up binding your code to someone else's, or putting it in public with the risk of conflicts, because you're losing modularity and the safety that infers.
Not to mention that by changing the structure of a common object, you may trigger a deoptimization. If that happens on DOM elements, it could be quite bad.
Can you avoid most of those issues most of the time? Yes. Do you want to bet on that and wake up every day hoping your code works in prod? Probably not. That's what best practices exist for. ;)
Perfectly happy with JS in a browser, but writing system code in JS just devolves into callback hell, and the stuff I'm working on is unmanageable, undocumented, and where there is documentation, I still can't tell what variable has what type(s).
user457812
So, people who code for node.js and do a bad job of it need a swift kick to the genitals.