Le 03/03/2014 10:11, Andy Wingo a écrit :
On Sun 02 Mar 2014 04:18, Domenic Denicola <dome...@domenicdenicola.com> writes:

You can just do `if (Symbol.iterator in potentialIterable)`.
Of course, this can introduce time-of-check-to-time-of-use bugs.
Actually calling @@iterator on the iterable is more reliable.
This only shifts the problem one step without really solving it. Calling @@iterator may return a non-iterator or may return something that looks like a iterator ('next' method), but throws when calling 'next'. I wonder if time-of-check-to-time-of-use bugs can be fully avoided entirely in JS? It might be possible to guarantee some properties in TypeScript assuming all consummers of a piece of code are checked by the TypeScript compiler.

In practice, it looks like JS devs have lived well with solution like Domenic's one.

David
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