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22:04
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Q: Help me condense this javascript function

j-man86I'm not too used to working with arrays in javascript, so was wondering if there is a good way to condense this down. Any pointers much appreciated! if($('.filters').length) { if(url === 'http://www.productionlocations.com/locations' || url === 'http://www.productionloca...

22:18
omg... that has not to be in the javascript..
Could you name an example of a "host object" (es5.github.com/#x4.3.8)?
document
Uint8Array
it's impossible to programmatically tell what is host object for sure
@Esailija What about Worker or XMLHttpRequest (the constructors)?
22:34
host objects
@Esailija I think they're native, not host...
because...
({}).toString.call( Worker )
... returns "[object Function]"
> it's impossible to programmatically tell what is host object for sure
in chrome they are exactly the same
I don't need to know it programmatically.... I'm just wondering...
Just saying doing test like ({}).toString.call( Worker ) won't tell you anything
It tells that Worker is an instance of Function
22:36
by the time you can run anything in chrome all host objects are already loaded
yeah because chrome chose to implement it that way
... which means that it and its behavior is fully defined by ECMAScript
User-defined constructors are native, and I think that Worker (and co.) are nothing else then manually defined (in JavaScript) functions provided by the browser
it's a bit easier in older ies, where host object functions do not even have .call
IE8, for example:
Well, yes, that means that in IE, those objects are indeed host object, but in modern browsers (Chrome, FF), they are native.
 "call" in XMLHttpRequest
false
>> "call" in String
true
no it means that chrome implements it differently
the standards for those only specify interface
({}).toString.call( XMLHttpRequest ) returns "[object DOMConstructor]". This means that it's host
(unlike Worker)
22:40
({}).toString.call( XMLHttpRequest )
"[object Function]"
Chrome?
(I'm in FF)
yeah chrome
This is the cause of my confusion: 'The value of the [[Class]] internal property of a host object may be any String value except one of "Arguments", "Array", "Boolean", "Date", "Error", "Function", "JSON", "Math", "Number", "Object", "RegExp", and "String".'
that only applies to native objects
It says "of host objects"
22:41
I mean, those are native objects
Which ones?
"Arguments", "Array", "Boolean", "Date", "Error", "Function", "JSON", "Math", "Number", "Object", "RegExp", and "String".'
Those are the [[Class]] names of native objects
So, according to the spec, if an object has a [[Class]] of "Function", it must be native.
make it default imo :P
22:45
({}).toString.call( XMLHttpRequest ) // "[object Function]"
XMLHttpRequest instanceof Function // false
Stupid Chrome -.-
again, host objects only have to have an interface
their specification doesn't say anything how to implement them in the platform
hey
hey
hey
if every website has unique IP address, why when I type my website's IP address, it just redirects to my hosting's webpage? It's shared hosting
how it knows to show my website then?
so all browsers have different results for them
all they say is to implement this interface
they don't say how
@Esailija As I quoted above, the spec states that host objects must not have a [[Class]] of "Function", so XMLHttpRequest should not be a "[object Function]".
yes obviously most browsers are then breaking the spec on that issue
22:48
Is seems that Chrome violates the spec here.
according to spec, parseInt("08") should not be attempted to be parsed as octal
if no radix is given it's either decimal or hexadecimal
so spec is broken on that issue as well
Hm, I think the old spec (ES3) stated that the behavior is not defined (so the implementation may parse it as either octal or decimal)
Leading white space in string is ignored. If radix is undefined or 0, it is assumed to be 10 except when the number begins with the character pairs 0x or 0X, in which case a radix of 16 is assumed.
it's pretty clear
either decimal or hexadecimal
That is ES5, right? I think ES3 was worded differently...
(it had an additional note at the bottom)
yeah.. why would I expect browsers to use 13 years old spec
:P
22:53
ES3: When radix is 0 or undefined and the string's number begins with a 0 digit not followed by an x or X, then the implementation may, at its discretion, interpret the number either as being octal or as being decimal. Implementations are encouraged to interpret numbers in this case as being decimal.
yes but es3 is exremely old
es5 says no octals
well, no implementation dependent parsing at least
Hello fellow javascripters
hello there
@ŠimeVidas it's pretty easy to prove what is host object by reading the spec:
4.3.6
native object # Ⓣ
object in an ECMAScript implementation whose semantics are fully defined by this specification rather than by the host environment.
4.3.8
host object # Ⓣ


NOTE Any object that is not native is a host object.
So it follows that anything that isn't on the spec you're reading is an host object
Yea, that's where I started my research :)
23:01
if you search for Worker, it's not found
--> host object
OK, but this is a native function:
and so on :P
function foo () {}
yes
NOTE Standard native objects are defined in this specification. Some native objects are built-in; others may be constructed during the course of execution of an ECMAScript program.
So, if the browser defines Worker as a JavaScript function (just like foo above), then it's native too.
23:03
no, host objects are completed before the execution environment is set
My point is, it depends how Worker is defined - C++, JavaScript....
function foo is constructed during the course of execution
it doesn't matter how it's implemented
chrome implements array functions in javascript
But what if a browser defines Worker in the same place where it defines Array, Function, and the other native constructors?
So, it just adds it to the group of native constructors...
...and defines it in the same way.
Does anyone here use adsense? will signing up for it kill me?
I don't know why would they do that, it's not part of javascript while Array and Function are
23:09
@Esailija I'm trying to understand something for which I have very little information (browser internals and stuff). I guess, it's not worth it...
a browser typically uses a javascript engine, let's say v8
then Array and Function are defined because otherwise it wouldn't be a javascript engine
Ah yes, of course.
and because Worker isn't javascript, the engine alone doesn't implement it
so they cannot implement it in the same place
well they can but .. why
That leaves the possibility that the browser defines Worker as a native function after the execution environment has been established... but I'm not sure how much sense that would make...
(since exec. environments are created multiple times on a single web-page)
host objects are made to complete the execution environment
23:12
@david adsense is easy to sign up for
I make my 2nd income from it :P
I love it
window is a host object
Hmm, okay then i will.
@Esailija Well, window is a special case, since the global object is a native object (es5.github.com/#x15.1), and window kind-of serves as the global object...
Can you choose to only have text ads?
hmm, so it's not just per click, you also get blings for just showing the ads
@Esailija I actually suspect that window is a native object...
23:15
it's different in every browser
and doesn't exist in node for example
Well, yes, I mean in modern browsers...
The global object is referenced by this from global code...
Node has such a this reference or?
(window is just a property of the global object which refers to the global object itself - it's a convenience in browsers)
Yes if the spec says so
So you could do this.window = this; in Node, I guess...
for me it's always been pretty obvious what is host object... anything that causes problems when you run it in different browser :P
The thing is, I'm writing an article on the built-in constructors of JavaScript (the 15 constructors defined by the spec), and I don't want to get the naming wrong...
23:20
basically if you have same piece of code and different results between browsers, then with 99% certainty that code deals with host objects
Initially, I wrote "built-in native constructors" (Array, Function, etc. ), and built-in host constructors (Worker, XMLHttpRequest, etc.), but now I'm not so sure anymore...
yes those are native and those are host
Array and Function will always exist in all correct ecmascript implementations while Worker and XMLHttpRequest will not
that means Array and Function are in browsers, node, rhino etc
But then I read the definition of "built-in object" es5.github.com/#x4.3.7
... and if I'm getting this correctly, Worker is technically not a built-in object
... meaning that only native objects can be built-in (according to the spec)
... which would then mean that the term "built-in host constructor" doesn't make sense
I think they just mean function foo() {}
since it says built in objects are native objects
Some native objects are built-in; others may be constructed during the course of execution of an ECMAScript program.
and function foo(){} is constructed during execution
but who knows? maybe @MattMcDonald
It seems that the spec hijacked the term "built-in object"
23:29
@Loktar how do you get the monies from adsense?
do they just dump it into your bank account?
I would be much happier if the spec had an additional NOTE stating: The host environment may also define other built-in objects....
an ECMAScript implementation may specify and define others. Every built-in object is a native object.

native object # Ⓣ
object in an ECMAScript implementation whose semantics are fully defined by this specification rather than by the host environment.
is it just me or do those completely contradict?
Every built-in object is a native object. -> Implementation may specify and define others -> native object === object in an ECMAScript implementation whose semantics are fully defined by this specification rather than by the host environment.
But, according to the spec, those other objects would be native objects.
Wait, what... ? :)
It says every built in is a native object
yet every native object is object in an ECMAScript implementation whose semantics are fully defined by this specification rather than by the host environment.
23:32
yet builtin objects maybe defined by the implementation
builtin === native
native === all in this spec
builtin === can be defined by implementation
it says those things
wtf?
I guess, they mean, an implementation may define additional Array methods (for instance)
and those additional methods would of course be native, too
but it says built-in objects are native, but native objects are whose semantics are fully defined by this specification rather than by the host environment.
so to be a native object, it must be in the spec
Well, semantics as in behavior...
it says, if it's not in this spec, it's not native
So our user-defined functions are fully defined, but are not in the spec
23:35
ok
Hi, Looking for help with JQGrid
Fully defined as in behavior, not content
I see
are you seeing it any clearer
I'm just happy this stuff doesn't matter :D
I think I'll ask a question on SO tomorrow
I need broader discussion
I'm out, see ya, thanks for the participation :)
user1385191
23:58
@Esailija this is one of the reasons I removed my ownership
user1385191
I don't know nearly as much about JS/ES as I'd like to
ah
comp.lang.javascript is probably best place for this kind of question though?
user1385191
yes
user1385191
just don't post from Google Groups
user1385191
use a news client + eternalseptember as the host

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