No, this is not possible. An object property has no position as objects are not ordered.
You have to choose between:
Arrays: Consecutive keys from the range [0..length), in order.
Objects: Arbitrary keys, no guaranteed order.
What the hell. Downvoting answers for not providing a hack?
@jfriend00: Arrays aren't ordered. We just think of them being ordered because we do loops like for (i = 0; i < a.length; ++i). But there's nothing actually intrisically ordered about an array in JavaScript. — T.J. Crowder17 mins ago
I have written a js library (think, jquery, but with much much less features, and targetted for newer browsers on mobile).
This library provides a extension mechanism. One of the ways the extension can be defined is:
$.extension("extname", function(options) {
this.forEach(function(elem) {
...
RT @stevefaulkner: Test ARIA Forward - all ARIA role, states and properties tests in one page http://www.html5accessibility.com/tests/ARIA-tests/ made by @hanshillen p ...
We have an in-house time-tracking application at the office.
We, the employees, can view an overview of our hours on a web page. This web page renders a table, with worked hours per day in table cells, which is styled as a monthly calendar. I wrote a small script which I can copy-paste in my con...
@Esailija right . unless the answer is really an answer to the question that was posed as an answer to answer the original question which now remains answerless because of this answer to an answer to a question which was nothing more than a non answer.
Possible Duplicate:
Are answers that just contain links elsewhere really “good answers”?
As the moderator who converted my answer to a comment will not respond, I would like some clarification from the community.
In the question Using abstract view model in MVC 3, I posted...
Mostly, people use var a = [] because Douglas Crockford says so.
His reasons include the non-intuitive and inconsistent behaviour of new Array():
var a = new Array(5); // an array pre-sized to 5 elements long
var b = new Array(5, 10); // an array with two elements in it
Note that there's ...
Does anyone know how to do it?
I would like to implement Facebook or Disqus comments.
I am using the gallery with the shutter effect.
Thanks for your help!
Even if you overwrite Array preserving the prototype? I mean, given that Array.prototype is malleable is there really any security difference between [] and Array()?
@KGZM the prototype isn't the problem. consider...if i have a constructor, it's because i want it called for every object created of that type. Since [] doesn't call Array (it calls the built-in array constructor, which just happens to have the name Array (until you overwrite it)), i'm asking for trouble if i redefine Array and then use []
@cHao Well, I thought the argument for using [] was that evil people may overwrite Array in other scripts on the same page? An argument, anyway. From the thread.
es5.github.com/#x11.1.4 "Let array be the result of creating a new object as if by the expression new Array() where Array is the standard built-in constructor with that name."
@KGZM psh. The arguments i'd use for [] are that (1) it's less error-prone than Array() (try calling it with a single number), and (2) it's less wordy. Security is possibly, maybe, kinda a side benefit -- but if you're letting random code run on your page, you have bigger problems than Array getting redefined