ECMAScript 5开发者_Python百科 has quite a few nice additions. John Resig has a good overview here. Here is a good ECMAScript 5 compatibility table.
A lot of this stuff can be "faked" for browsers that don't support these functions yet. Do you know of any scripts that can do this? I'm particularly interested in Object.create.
For example, Douglas Crockford's JSON script checks if JSON functions exist before creating them.
If there was more like the JSON one we could include them when we need to use the new functions.
Crockford recommends this kind of Object.create
shim:
if (typeof Object.create != "function") {
Object.create = function (o) {
function F(){}
F.prototype = o;
return new F;
};
}
But please don't do this.
The problem with this approach is that ES5 Object.create
has a signature of 2 arguments: first — an object to inherit from, and second (optional) — an object representing properties (or rather, descriptors) to add to newly created object.
Object.create(O[, Properties]); // see 15.2.3.5, ECMA-262 5th ed.
What we have is an inconsistent implementation with 2 different behaviors. In environments with native Object.create
, method knows how to handle second argument; in environments without native Object.create
, it doesn't.
What are the practical implications?
Well, if there's some code (say, a third party script) that wants to use Object.create
, it's rather reasonable for that code to do this:
if (Object.create) {
var child = Object.create(parent, properties);
}
— essentially assuming that if Object.create
exists, it must conform to specs — accept second argument and add corresponding properties to an object.
But, with the above-mentioned shim, second argument is simply ignored. There's not even an indication of something going wrong differently. A silent failure, so to speak — something that's rather painful to detect and fix.
Can we do better?
Well, it's actually impossible to create a fully-conforming Object.create
shim using only (standard) ES3 facilities. The best solution is to create a custom wrapper method.
There are, however, few alternative (less than optimal) things you can try:
1) Notify user about inability to work with second argument
if (!Object.create) {
Object.create = function (o) {
if (arguments.length > 1) {
throw Error('second argument is not supported');
}
// ... proceed ...
};
}
2) Try to handle second argument:
if (!Object.create) {
Object.create = function (parent, properties) {
function F(){}
F.prototype = parent;
var obj = new F;
if (properties) {
// ... augment obj ...
}
return obj;
};
}
Note that "properties" is an object representing property descriptors, not just property names/values, and is something that's not very trivial to support (some things are not even possible, such as controlling enumerability of a property):
Object.create(parent, {
foo: {
value: 'bar',
writable: true
},
baz: {
get: function(){ return 'baz getter'; },
set: function(value){ return 'baz setter'; },
enumerable: true
}
});
The other inconsistency in the original shim is that it doesn't take care of parent object being null
.
var foo = Object.create(null);
This creates an object whose [[Prototype]] is null
; in other words, object that doesn't inherit from anything, not even Object.prototype
(which all native objects in ECMAScript inherit from).
foo.toString; // undefined
foo.constructor; // undefined
// etc.
This is, by the way, useful to create "proper" hash tables in ECMAScript.
It's possible to emulate this behavior, but only using non-standard extensions, such as "magical" __proto__
property (so implementation would be not very portable or robust). Solution to this problem is similar: either emulate ES5 implementation fully, or notify about inconsistency/failure.
es5-shim http://github.com/kriskowal/es5-shim/
This was part of the narwhal stand-alone javascript environment, but has been broken out on its own. It's pretty darn mature and precise.
es5 - JavaScript/EcmaScript 5 in 3 is a collection shared at BitBucket. Object.create
in particular is an easy one to fake, made popular by Crockford et al, but improved on here by Justin Love, focussing on many ES5 parts.
If you don't mind learning the library and writing some code yourself, you can find some code implementations of the ECMAScript 5 library at
https://developer.mozilla.org/En/JavaScript/ECMAScript_5_support_in_Mozilla
For example, the code for Array.filter
And then Crockford has JSON.parse/stringify in json2.js
https://github.com/douglascrockford/JSON-js
精彩评论