Why does applying the slice method to the javascript arguments
value as follows Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments)
convert it to an array? If slice is used on arrays, and arguments
is not an array, then how does this work? Is it just a special case when slice
is applied to arguments?
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Michael Paulukonis
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Jeff Storey
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1hrm. yeah. Why wouldn't the conversion be a feature of the arguments object, instead of slice? – Michael Paulukonis Jan 14 '13 at 21:52
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possible duplicate of [how does Array.prototype.slice.call() work?](http://stackoverflow.com/q/7056925/1048572) – Bergi Jun 29 '15 at 03:17
2 Answers
5
From the EcmaScript specification on Array.prototype.slice
:
NOTE The
slice
function is intentionally generic; it does not require that itsthis
value be an Array object. Therefore it can be transferred to other kinds of objects for use as a method. Whether theslice
function can be applied successfully to a host object is implementation-dependent.
And so, slice
works on every object that has a length
property (like Arguments
objects). And even for those that do not, it then just returns an empty array.

Bergi
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3
Right, this is a trick that takes advantage of the fact that arguments are an enumerable list. It works on other enumerable lists too (for example nodelists).

Christophe
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