Given that "arguments" is not a true array, why does Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments) work, but Array.prototype.slice.call(someobject) not work?
If the arguments is just an object with a length property, then why does it seem to behave differently from other non-array objects with respect to, say, Array.prototype.slice.
For example, the following code fi开发者_运维问答rst alerts "undefined", and then alerts "foo". Why do these differ?
(function(a){
var myobj = {0 : "foo"};
var myobjarray = Array.prototype.slice.call(myobj);
var argumentsarray = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments);
alert(myobjarray.shift());
alert(argumentsarray.shift());
})("foo");
It works if your object has a length
property.
var myobj = { 0: "foo", 1: "bar", length: 2 };
var myobjarray = [].slice.call(myobj);
alert(myobjarray.shift());
Most Array methods rely on the length property. If you try to execute an Array method on an object that doesn't expose the expected interface, you'll get unexpected results.
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