Re: [[Class]] Property of Host Object

2010-07-23 Thread David Flanagan

Allen,

The host vs. native distinction has long bothered me as well.  Thanks 
for a particularly lucid explanation.  In the next edition of the spec, 
perhaps you could go further and eliminate the use of the word host 
altogether, leaving you with only native objects and non-native objects. 
 Then you don't have to say that host objects can be native, or non-native.


Garrett,

You could drop the confusing word host, too.  If you invert the 
boolean sense of your function then you can call it isNativeObject() or 
isNativeValue() or just isNative().


I submitted similar comments to Allen while the spec was in its public 
review phase.  I didn't feel strongly about getting it fixed, however, 
because the ambiguous definitions in question are in a non-normative 
portion of the spec.  (All of section 4, including the definitions are 
non-normative.)


And tangentially related to the original question about the nature of 
alert, and tangentally related to the notion of accidentally provided 
discrimination mechanisms, here is how to determine whether an ES5 
object (native or non-native) is callable.  It relies on the fact that 
forEach() tests for callability before checking for an empty array.


Object.isCallable = function(o) {
// Array.prototype.forEach throws TypeError for non-callable args
try {
[].forEach(o);  // o will never be invoked since array is empty
return true;
} catch (x) {
if (x instanceof TypeError) return false;
else throw x;
}
};

Of course I don't have an ES5 implementation with callable objects that 
are not functions to test it out on.


David

Mark S. Miller wrote:
On Mon, Jul 19, 2010 at 2:35 PM, Allen Wirfs-Brock 
allen.wirfs-br...@microsoft.com 
mailto:allen.wirfs-br...@microsoft.com wrote:


  -Original Message-
  From: Mark S. Miller [mailto:erig...@google.com
mailto:erig...@google.com]
  Sent: Monday, July 19, 2010 2:02 PM
  
  Do we??  What do you think host object means?
 
  Objects that are not native objects. I.e., the categories are
disjoint and Garrett's
  isHostObject method is correct.
 

Ok, I think we generally agree.  host object as used in the ES5
spec. in essentially all cases means  not native object.
 Garrett's isHostObject test would arguably almost be valid if used
within a perfectly conforming and unextended ES5 implementation.
 However, a conforming implementation is allowed to provide
additional types, values, objects,... and such extensions might
include the use of new [[Class]] values.  For example, the JSON
object is semantically a perfectly normal native object but has a
distinct [[Class]] value.  If an implementation included a different
but similar extension isHostObject would classify it as a host
object.  Whether or not you are happy with that result probably
depends upon your isHostObject use case.


I agree. FWIW, I am happy with that result. By the definition of ES5 
native object, such an object is not an *ES5* native object, since it 
has a [[Class]] value not defined by the ES5 spec. By the note on the 
host object definition, it is therefore (to ES5) a host object.


Perhaps Garrett's function should be renamed isES5HostObject for 
clarity. With that new name, I would feel comfortable using and 
recommending use of that function.
 



The starting point of this discussion seems to be the desire to find
a reliable way to discriminate  host objects.  ES5 wasn't
intentionally trying to provide such a mechanism and I don't believe
that it accidently did so.


I agree that we did not intend to provide such a discrimination 
mechanism. But I do think we accidentally did so.


 



Allen




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Re: [[Class]] Property of Host Object

2010-07-23 Thread Mark S. Miller
On Thu, Jul 22, 2010 at 11:16 PM, David Flanagan da...@davidflanagan.comwrote:

 Allen,

 The host vs. native distinction has long bothered me as well.  Thanks for a
 particularly lucid explanation.  In the next edition of the spec, perhaps
 you could go further and eliminate the use of the word host altogether,
 leaving you with only native objects and non-native objects.  Then you don't
 have to say that host objects can be native, or non-native.

 Garrett,

 You could drop the confusing word host, too.  If you invert the boolean
 sense of your function then you can call it isNativeObject() or
 isNativeValue() or just isNative().

 I submitted similar comments to Allen while the spec was in its public
 review phase.  I didn't feel strongly about getting it fixed, however,
 because the ambiguous definitions in question are in a non-normative portion
 of the spec.  (All of section 4, including the definitions are
 non-normative.)

 And tangentially related to the original question about the nature of
 alert, and tangentally related to the notion of accidentally provided
 discrimination mechanisms, here is how to determine whether an ES5 object
 (native or non-native) is callable.  It relies on the fact that forEach()
 tests for callability before checking for an empty array.

 Object.isCallable = function(o) {
// Array.prototype.forEach throws TypeError for non-callable args
try {
[].forEach(o);  // o will never be invoked since array is empty
return true;
} catch (x) {
if (x instanceof TypeError) return false;
else throw x;
}
 };


Clever!

Fortunately, for this one, you can simply ask

typeof o === 'function'

See table 20 in 11.4.3




 Of course I don't have an ES5 implementation with callable objects that are
 not functions to test it out on.

David

 Mark S. Miller wrote:

 On Mon, Jul 19, 2010 at 2:35 PM, Allen Wirfs-Brock 
 allen.wirfs-br...@microsoft.com mailto:allen.wirfs-br...@microsoft.com
 wrote:

  -Original Message-
  From: Mark S. Miller [mailto:erig...@google.com
mailto:erig...@google.com]
  Sent: Monday, July 19, 2010 2:02 PM
  
  Do we??  What do you think host object means?
 
  Objects that are not native objects. I.e., the categories are
disjoint and Garrett's
  isHostObject method is correct.
 

Ok, I think we generally agree.  host object as used in the ES5
spec. in essentially all cases means  not native object.
 Garrett's isHostObject test would arguably almost be valid if used
within a perfectly conforming and unextended ES5 implementation.
 However, a conforming implementation is allowed to provide
additional types, values, objects,... and such extensions might
include the use of new [[Class]] values.  For example, the JSON
object is semantically a perfectly normal native object but has a
distinct [[Class]] value.  If an implementation included a different
but similar extension isHostObject would classify it as a host
object.  Whether or not you are happy with that result probably
depends upon your isHostObject use case.


 I agree. FWIW, I am happy with that result. By the definition of ES5
 native object, such an object is not an *ES5* native object, since it has
 a [[Class]] value not defined by the ES5 spec. By the note on the host
 object definition, it is therefore (to ES5) a host object.

 Perhaps Garrett's function should be renamed isES5HostObject for clarity.
 With that new name, I would feel comfortable using and recommending use of
 that function.


The starting point of this discussion seems to be the desire to find
a reliable way to discriminate  host objects.  ES5 wasn't
intentionally trying to provide such a mechanism and I don't believe
that it accidently did so.


 I agree that we did not intend to provide such a discrimination mechanism.
 But I do think we accidentally did so.



Allen




 --
Cheers,
--MarkM


 

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 es-discuss@mozilla.org
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Re: [[Class]] Property of Host Object

2010-07-23 Thread Garrett Smith
On 7/22/10, Mark S. Miller erig...@google.com wrote:
 On Thu, Jul 22, 2010 at 11:16 PM, David Flanagan
 da...@davidflanagan.comwrote:

 Allen,

 The host vs. native distinction has long bothered me as well.  Thanks for
 a
 particularly lucid explanation.  In the next edition of the spec, perhaps
 you could go further and eliminate the use of the word host altogether,
 leaving you with only native objects and non-native objects.  Then you
 don't
 have to say that host objects can be native, or non-native.

 Garrett,

 You could drop the confusing word host, too.  If you invert the boolean
 sense of your function then you can call it isNativeObject() or
 isNativeValue() or just isNative().


Changing the name would not make it interoperable with all released IE
versions.

The problem of isNativeObject can mostly be avoided.

[...]

 Fortunately, for this one, you can simply ask

 typeof o === 'function'


Yes, and much shorter than David's example and it still only holds
true in ES5 implementations, so not interoperable.

The other consideration with David's example is if it is used with any
library that adds Array.prototype.forEach, and many do. In that case,
David's `isCallable` would return true for anything, even if it was
not passed anything at all:

Array.prototype.forEach = function(fun , context) {

Now most of the time, web sites check first, as the examples on MDC
have long advocated, however there are many copy'n'pastes of what I
see on Twitter.com. I've posted this on comp.lang.javascript -- have
you noticed this?


http://a2.twimg.com/a/1279831293/javascripts/twitter.js
(alternatively:
http://a2.twimg.com/a/1279831293/javascripts/twitter.js?1279833486)


// Source code for Twitter.com:
if(!Array.forEach) {
  Array.prototype.forEach = function(D, E) {
var C = E || window;
for(var B=0, A = this.length; B  A;++B) {
  D.call(C,this[B],B,this)
}
};

  Array.prototype.map=function(...

The same strategy was copy'n'pasted to the company CoTweet, also a
jQuery shop.

The source of this may be Twitter employee Dustin Diaz:
  http://www.dustindiaz.com/sugar-arrays/
The code seen on Twitter.com looks strikingly similar, using `window`
as global object, using pre increment instead of post increment, not
checking to see if it is a sparse as if(`i in this`){ ... }, yet it is
different than Prototype's each.


And so using David's 'isCallable', we could have
var nothingIsCallable = isCallable(); // true on Twitter.com

Same problem with Function.prototype.bind checks:
function isCallable(obj) {
  try {
Function.prototype.bind(obj, null);
return true;
  } catch(ex) {
return false;
  }
}

Harmony should differentiate between non-native and native objects.

Constructs such as that should not be depended upon.

Garrett
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RE: [[Class]] Property of Host Object

2010-07-19 Thread Allen Wirfs-Brock
 -Original Message-
 From: Mark S. Miller [mailto:erig...@google.com]
... 
 Is the following one of those cases:
 
  The value of the [[Class]] internal property of a host object
  may be any String value except one of Arguments, Array,
  Boolean, Date, Error, Function, JSON, Math, Number,
  Object, RegExp, and String
 
 
Yes. As you said in an earlier message, the intent was that the host should 
environment should not violate specification of the nominal types used by the 
specification.  But certainly, a host environment  could produce such values 
and even management them differently as long as it doesn't violate any the 
semantics for that type that appear in the ES5 spec. 

 If so, then I think we may simply have a term rotation. Everytime I say host
 object, and AFAICT every time the spec says host object other than the
 definition (4.3.8), both I and it mean what you refer to above as a 
 non-native
 host object. Also, by your clarification above, a native host object seems
 indistinguishable from any other native object, so I'm not sure what purpose
 the distinction has.
 
Yes, I agree.  I think the main bug  in this regard in the spec. in that the 
definition in 4.3.8 does not clarify this distinction. But note that 4.3.6 is 
quite clear that a native object is /any/ object whose semantics are fully 
defined by the ES5 specification and the note to 4.3.8 says that any object 
that is not native (ie whose semantics are not fully defined by the ES5 
specification) is a host object.  The only host objects that the spec. needs to 
explicitly talk about are host objects that are not native objects.

 In any case, we clearly have a disagreement about our memory of what we took
 these terms to mean. Anyone else who was there, care to weigh in?
 
Do we??  What do you think host object means?


Allen
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Re: [[Class]] Property of Host Object

2010-07-19 Thread Mark S. Miller
On Mon, Jul 19, 2010 at 1:49 PM, Allen Wirfs-Brock 
allen.wirfs-br...@microsoft.com wrote:

  -Original Message-
  From: Mark S. Miller [mailto:erig...@google.com]
 ...
  Is the following one of those cases:
 
   The value of the [[Class]] internal property of a host object
   may be any String value except one of Arguments, Array,
   Boolean, Date, Error, Function, JSON, Math, Number,
   Object, RegExp, and String
 

 Yes. As you said in an earlier message, the intent was that the host should
 environment should not violate specification of the nominal types used by
 the specification.  But certainly, a host environment  could produce such
 values and even management them differently as long as it doesn't violate
 any the semantics for that type that appear in the ES5 spec.

  If so, then I think we may simply have a term rotation. Everytime I say
 host
  object, and AFAICT every time the spec says host object other than the
  definition (4.3.8), both I and it mean what you refer to above as a
 non-native
  host object. Also, by your clarification above, a native host object
 seems
  indistinguishable from any other native object, so I'm not sure what
 purpose
  the distinction has.
 
 Yes, I agree.  I think the main bug  in this regard in the spec. in that
 the definition in 4.3.8 does not clarify this distinction. But note that
 4.3.6 is quite clear that a native object is /any/ object whose semantics
 are fully defined by the ES5 specification and the note to 4.3.8 says that
 any object that is not native (ie whose semantics are not fully defined by
 the ES5 specification) is a host object.  The only host objects that the
 spec. needs to explicitly talk about are host objects that are not native
 objects.

  In any case, we clearly have a disagreement about our memory of what we
 took
  these terms to mean. Anyone else who was there, care to weigh in?
 
 Do we??  What do you think host object means?


Objects that are not native objects. I.e., the categories are disjoint and
Garrett's isHostObject method is correct.





 Allen
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RE: [[Class]] Property of Host Object

2010-07-18 Thread Allen Wirfs-Brock
Table 8, section 8.6.2
Internal Property: [[Class]]
Value Type Domain: String
Description: A String value indicating a specification defined classification 
of objects

Allen

From: es-discuss-boun...@mozilla.org [mailto:es-discuss-boun...@mozilla.org] On 
Behalf Of Mark S. Miller
Sent: Saturday, July 17, 2010 12:54 PM
To: Garrett Smith
Cc: es5-disc...@mozilla.org; es-discuss
Subject: Re: [[Class]] Property of Host Object

In short, I largely agree with you about the language in the ES5 spec text. My 
interpretation of that text derives in large part from my memories of the 
conversations that led up to it, and my sense of the intent we were trying to 
capture. In the absence of that context, I would probably arrive at the same 
reading of ES5 that you have.

At this point, I will wait until others who participated in those conversations 
weigh in and state their sense of our agreed intent. Once we understand what 
agreed intent there actually was, we can proceed from there.

On Sat, Jul 17, 2010 at 12:17 PM, Garrett Smith 
dhtmlkitc...@gmail.commailto:dhtmlkitc...@gmail.com wrote:
On 7/17/10, Mark S. Miller erig...@google.commailto:erig...@google.com 
wrote:
 [+es5-discuss as a possible errata issue arises below]


 On Sat, Jul 17, 2010 at 12:37 AM, Garrett Smith
 dhtmlkitc...@gmail.commailto:dhtmlkitc...@gmail.comwrote:

 On 7/16/10, Mark S. Miller erig...@google.commailto:erig...@google.com 
 wrote:
  On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 9:54 PM, Garrett Smith
  dhtmlkitc...@gmail.commailto:dhtmlkitc...@gmail.comwrote:
 
  I have a question reqarding [[Class]] property as defined In ES5:
 
  | The value of the [[Class]] internal property of a host object
  | may be any String value except one of Arguments, Array,
  | Boolean, Date, Error, Function, JSON, Math, Number,
  | Object, RegExp, and String
 
  May it be something other than a string value? Or must it be a string
  value?
 
 
  It must be a string value.
 

 The specification says may.


 Ah. I see the ambiguity. may there is modifying any. It should probably
 have been stated:

 ...must be a String value and may be any String value except...

 In reviewing the document, the possibility that text would allow non-String
 [[Class]]es had not occurred to me. Now that you point it out, and can see
 some reasons why we might want to leave the current text alone and allow
 non-String [[Class]]es.

I don't.

[[Class]] must be a string value. If the [[Class]] property is absent,
what happens when the object is supplied to Object.prototype.toString?
TypeError. Why not avoid that possibility and require host object to
have [[Class]] be a string value?




 
 
  Why must a host object's class be none of the built-in classes listed?
 
 
  So that the [[Class]] property serve as a reliable nominal type check
  for
  the contract that the other internal properties and methods satisfy.
  This
 is
  used primarily within the spec itself. Previously, it wasn't clear what
 was
  meant when the spec said, for example, if F is a function. Now we
 clearly
  say if the [[Class]] of F is 'Function'  if that's what we mean.
 

 I think I see the problem.

 What you really want to say there is:

 |  The value of the [[Class]] internal property of any non-native host
 |  object must be any String value except one of...


 Saying non-native and host together is redundant. Although the language
 of 4.3.6 and 4.3.8 is not as clear as it should be, I read these as stating
 that all EcmaScript objects are either host or native. No object can be both
 host and native. And no object can be neither host nor native.

It is not redundant. Repeating what was written in my last message:

|  While the specification does not preclude the possibility that a host
|  object may be implemented with native semantics, it nonetheless
|  defines a host object:

I understand that the values for [[Class]] are used internally by the
specification. One example of that is Array.isArray(x), where the
[[Class]] property is used internally. Another example is behavior for
`JSON` reviver.

The specification allows for two types of host objects:
 * host objects as native objects
 * host objects as not native objects (does not use native semantics)

From the implementors point of view, what matters the ability derive
an inference from [[Class]]; if [[Class]] is x then [action]. However,
from a programmer's perspective, `Object.prototype.toString.call(x)`
cannot discriminate between objects originating in the host
environment (what is currently defined as host object) and native
objects. Mostly they shouldn't care, but should follow the
specification approach to derive [[Class]] based inference, however
they can't follow that because that is not compatible with existing
implementations (notably IE versions and Opera (which copied IE)), and
making an isStrict supported global flag is not going to provide a
closely related inference about various types of host objects across a
wide range of implementations

Re: [[Class]] Property of Host Object

2010-07-18 Thread Mark S. Miller
Hi Allen, that answers the must is be a String? issue, thanks.

The more important issue is our intent regarding the definitions of host
and native objects. What is your memory of this issue? How well do you
think the spec reflects this intent?

On Sun, Jul 18, 2010 at 7:31 AM, Allen Wirfs-Brock 
allen.wirfs-br...@microsoft.com wrote:

  Table 8, section 8.6.2

 Internal Property: [[Class]]

 Value Type Domain: String

 Description: A String value indicating a specification defined
 classification of objects



 Allen



 *From:* es-discuss-boun...@mozilla.org [mailto:
 es-discuss-boun...@mozilla.org] *On Behalf Of *Mark S. Miller
 *Sent:* Saturday, July 17, 2010 12:54 PM
 *To:* Garrett Smith
 *Cc:* es5-disc...@mozilla.org; es-discuss
 *Subject:* Re: [[Class]] Property of Host Object



 In short, I largely agree with you about the language in the ES5 spec text.
 My interpretation of that text derives in large part from my memories of the
 conversations that led up to it, and my sense of the intent we were trying
 to capture. In the absence of that context, I would probably arrive at the
 same reading of ES5 that you have.



 At this point, I will wait until others who participated in those
 conversations weigh in and state their sense of our agreed intent. Once we
 understand what agreed intent there actually was, we can proceed from
 there.



 On Sat, Jul 17, 2010 at 12:17 PM, Garrett Smith dhtmlkitc...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 On 7/17/10, Mark S. Miller erig...@google.com wrote:
  [+es5-discuss as a possible errata issue arises below]
 
 
  On Sat, Jul 17, 2010 at 12:37 AM, Garrett Smith
  dhtmlkitc...@gmail.comwrote:
 
  On 7/16/10, Mark S. Miller erig...@google.com wrote:
   On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 9:54 PM, Garrett Smith
   dhtmlkitc...@gmail.comwrote:
  
   I have a question reqarding [[Class]] property as defined In ES5:
  
   | The value of the [[Class]] internal property of a host object
   | may be any String value except one of Arguments, Array,
   | Boolean, Date, Error, Function, JSON, Math, Number,
   | Object, RegExp, and String
  
   May it be something other than a string value? Or must it be a string
   value?
  
  
   It must be a string value.
  
 
  The specification says may.
 
 
  Ah. I see the ambiguity. may there is modifying any. It should
 probably
  have been stated:
 
  ...must be a String value and may be any String value except...
 
  In reviewing the document, the possibility that text would allow
 non-String
  [[Class]]es had not occurred to me. Now that you point it out, and can
 see
  some reasons why we might want to leave the current text alone and allow
  non-String [[Class]]es.
 

 I don't.

 [[Class]] must be a string value. If the [[Class]] property is absent,
 what happens when the object is supplied to Object.prototype.toString?
 TypeError. Why not avoid that possibility and require host object to
 have [[Class]] be a string value?


 
 
 
  
  
   Why must a host object's class be none of the built-in classes
 listed?
  
  
   So that the [[Class]] property serve as a reliable nominal type check
   for
   the contract that the other internal properties and methods satisfy.
   This
  is
   used primarily within the spec itself. Previously, it wasn't clear
 what
  was
   meant when the spec said, for example, if F is a function. Now we
  clearly
   say if the [[Class]] of F is 'Function'  if that's what we mean.
  
 
  I think I see the problem.
 
  What you really want to say there is:
 
  |  The value of the [[Class]] internal property of any non-native host
  |  object must be any String value except one of...
 
 
  Saying non-native and host together is redundant. Although the
 language
  of 4.3.6 and 4.3.8 is not as clear as it should be, I read these as
 stating
  that all EcmaScript objects are either host or native. No object can be
 both
  host and native. And no object can be neither host nor native.
 

 It is not redundant. Repeating what was written in my last message:


 |  While the specification does not preclude the possibility that a host
 |  object may be implemented with native semantics, it nonetheless
 |  defines a host object:

  I understand that the values for [[Class]] are used internally by the
 specification. One example of that is Array.isArray(x), where the
 [[Class]] property is used internally. Another example is behavior for
 `JSON` reviver.

 The specification allows for two types of host objects:
  * host objects as native objects
  * host objects as not native objects (does not use native semantics)

 From the implementors point of view, what matters the ability derive
 an inference from [[Class]]; if [[Class]] is x then [action]. However,
 from a programmer's perspective, `Object.prototype.toString.call(x)`
 cannot discriminate between objects originating in the host
 environment (what is currently defined as host object) and native
 objects. Mostly they shouldn't care, but should follow the
 specification approach to derive

RE: [[Class]] Property of Host Object

2010-07-18 Thread Allen Wirfs-Brock
 The more important issue is our intent regarding the definitions of host 
 and native objects.

First regarding, alert in IE.  Historically it is what it is and nobody should 
make any assumptions concerning the future based upon previous versions of IE 
or what they have observed so for in IE9 preview builds.  I don't think there 
is any disagreement that the [[class]] of alert should be 'Function'. However, 
if you want to pin that down in a standard then WebIDL is probably the place 
you need to do it.

I agree that there is still a lack of clarity in the ES5 spec. regarding the 
definition of host object and the distinction between host and native 
objects.  The ES5 spec. is better than the previous editions in this regard but 
could still be improved.  This isn't an error that can be corrected by an 
errata but it is something that can be improved by rewrites in future editions. 
In particular, the spec. is fuzzy about whether the sets of native and host 
objects are disjoint.

Here is what I believe is the intent:

Native Object: as stated in 4.3.6, an object that fully implements the object 
semantics defined by the Ecma-262 specification. Such objects might be 
built-in, user defined using ECMAScript code, or provided by the host  (and 
that presumably includes libraries of native objects that are accessed via host 
defined facilities).  The important point and the characteristic that makes 
then native is that they fully conform to the standards semantics for objects.

Host object: as stated in 4.3.8, an object supplied by the host environment.  
If a host object fully implements the standard object semantics then it is also 
a native object (hence native and host objects are not two disjoint sets).  
However, host objects are not required to implement this standard semantics.  
In addition, the note to 4.3.8 says that any object that isn't native (ie, 
doesn't implement standard object semantics) is a host object.

So essentially, they are two kinds of host objects: native host objects and 
non-native host objects.  The spec. doesn't explicitly talk about native host 
objects because their hostness is semantically irrelevant if they are also 
native.  Hence, when the spec. talks about host objects in most cases it is 
really talking about non-native host objects in order to impose specific 
sematic constraints upon them.  I believe that in most cases in the ES5 spec,  
host object should be read as meaning non-native host object.

By these terms, an  Array instance (or other built-in object class instance) 
can be a host object but if it is, it must be a native host object. That is, it 
most fully implement the specific semantics for that kind of object.

Allen

From: Mark S. Miller [mailto:erig...@google.com]
Sent: Sunday, July 18, 2010 9:52 AM
To: Allen Wirfs-Brock
Cc: Garrett Smith; es5-disc...@mozilla.org; es-discuss
Subject: Re: [[Class]] Property of Host Object

Hi Allen, that answers the must is be a String? issue, thanks.

The more important issue is our intent regarding the definitions of host and 
native objects. What is your memory of this issue? How well do you think the 
spec reflects this intent?
On Sun, Jul 18, 2010 at 7:31 AM, Allen Wirfs-Brock 
allen.wirfs-br...@microsoft.commailto:allen.wirfs-br...@microsoft.com wrote:
Table 8, section 8.6.2
Internal Property: [[Class]]
Value Type Domain: String
Description: A String value indicating a specification defined classification 
of objects

Allen

From: es-discuss-boun...@mozilla.orgmailto:es-discuss-boun...@mozilla.org 
[mailto:es-discuss-boun...@mozilla.orgmailto:es-discuss-boun...@mozilla.org] 
On Behalf Of Mark S. Miller
Sent: Saturday, July 17, 2010 12:54 PM
To: Garrett Smith
Cc: es5-disc...@mozilla.orgmailto:es5-disc...@mozilla.org; es-discuss
Subject: Re: [[Class]] Property of Host Object

In short, I largely agree with you about the language in the ES5 spec text. My 
interpretation of that text derives in large part from my memories of the 
conversations that led up to it, and my sense of the intent we were trying to 
capture. In the absence of that context, I would probably arrive at the same 
reading of ES5 that you have.

At this point, I will wait until others who participated in those conversations 
weigh in and state their sense of our agreed intent. Once we understand what 
agreed intent there actually was, we can proceed from there.

On Sat, Jul 17, 2010 at 12:17 PM, Garrett Smith 
dhtmlkitc...@gmail.commailto:dhtmlkitc...@gmail.com wrote:
On 7/17/10, Mark S. Miller erig...@google.commailto:erig...@google.com 
wrote:
 [+es5-discuss as a possible errata issue arises below]


 On Sat, Jul 17, 2010 at 12:37 AM, Garrett Smith
 dhtmlkitc...@gmail.commailto:dhtmlkitc...@gmail.comwrote:

 On 7/16/10, Mark S. Miller erig...@google.commailto:erig...@google.com 
 wrote:
  On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 9:54 PM, Garrett Smith
  dhtmlkitc...@gmail.commailto:dhtmlkitc...@gmail.comwrote:
 
  I have a question reqarding [[Class]] property

Re: [[Class]] Property of Host Object

2010-07-18 Thread Garrett Smith
On 7/18/10, Allen Wirfs-Brock allen.wirfs-br...@microsoft.com wrote:
 The more important issue is our intent regarding the definitions of
 host and native objects.

 First regarding, alert in IE.  Historically it is what it is and nobody
 should make any assumptions concerning the future based upon previous
 versions of IE or what they have observed so for in IE9 preview builds.  I


I hope the same can be said for the bug related to catch clauses and
scope in IE9.

 don't think there is any disagreement that the [[class]] of alert should be
 'Function'. However, if you want to pin that down in a standard then WebIDL
 is probably the place you need to do it.


What is the basis for making assertions of what the [[Class]] for any
host object should be?

[...]

 So essentially, they are two kinds of host objects: native host objects and
 non-native host objects.  The spec. doesn't explicitly talk about native
 host objects because their hostness is semantically irrelevant if they are
 also native.

While that is true for the purposes of the specification, it is not
necessarily true for script authors. For any script wanting to define
`isHostObject`, that script is going to be in a predicament.

 Hence, when the spec. talks about host objects in most cases
 it is really talking about non-native host objects in order to impose
 specific sematic constraints upon them.  I believe that in most cases in the
 ES5 spec,  host object should be read as meaning non-native host object.


Again, if the specification definition of host object is correct --
and you have confirmed that it is -- then there are two types of host
objects, native, and non-native. And in that case, the clause that
mentions [[Class]] property must change as I initially suggested.

[snip remainder]

Garrett
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RE: [[Class]] Property of Host Object

2010-07-18 Thread Allen Wirfs-Brock
 -Original Message-
 From: Garrett Smith [mailto:dhtmlkitc...@gmail.com]
 
 I hope the same can be said for the bug related to catch clauses and scope in
 IE9.
 
Bugs are for reporting and fixing...it's been reported but if you're ever 
unsure it never hurts to report it via http://connect.microsoft.com/ie 

 
 While that is true for the purposes of the specification, it is not 
 necessarily true
 for script authors. For any script wanting to define `isHostObject`, that 
 script is
 going to be in a predicament.
 

isHostObject sounds inherently implementation dependent to me.  I don't see how 
you could possibly write such a thing in an implementation independent manner, 
given the current specification.  I also don't know why you would want to.  
What's the use case?

Allen

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Re: [[Class]] Property of Host Object

2010-07-18 Thread Mark S. Miller
On Sun, Jul 18, 2010 at 5:58 PM, Allen Wirfs-Brock 
allen.wirfs-br...@microsoft.com wrote:

  So essentially, they are two kinds of host objects: native host objects
 and non-native host objects.  The spec. doesn’t explicitly talk about native
 host objects because their hostness is semantically irrelevant if they are
 also native.  Hence, when the spec. talks about “host objects” in most cases
 it is really talking about non-native host objects in order to impose
 specific sematic constraints upon them.  I believe that in most cases in the
 ES5 spec,  “host object” should be read as meaning “non-native host object”.


 Is the following one of those cases:

| The value of the [[Class]] internal property of a host object
| may be any String value except one of Arguments, Array,
| Boolean, Date, Error, Function, JSON, Math, Number,
| Object, RegExp, and String

If so, then I think we may simply have a term rotation. Everytime I say
host object, and AFAICT every time the spec says host object other than
the definition (4.3.8), both I and it mean what you refer to above as a
non-native host object. Also, by your clarification above, a native host
object seems indistinguishable from any other native object, so I'm not
sure what purpose the distinction has.

In any case, we clearly have a disagreement about our memory of what we took
these terms to mean. Anyone else who was there, care to weigh in?



-- 
Cheers,
--MarkM
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Re: [[Class]] Property of Host Object

2010-07-17 Thread Mark S. Miller
On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 9:54 PM, Garrett Smith dhtmlkitc...@gmail.comwrote:

 I have a question reqarding [[Class]] property as defined In ES5:

 | The value of the [[Class]] internal property of a host object
 | may be any String value except one of Arguments, Array,
 | Boolean, Date, Error, Function, JSON, Math, Number,
 | Object, RegExp, and String

 May it be something other than a string value? Or must it be a string
 value?


It must be a string value.



 Why must a host object's class be none of the built-in classes listed?


So that the [[Class]] property serve as a reliable nominal type check for
the contract that the other internal properties and methods satisfy. This is
used primarily within the spec itself. Previously, it wasn't clear what was
meant when the spec said, for example, if F is a function. Now we clearly
say if the [[Class]] of F is 'Function'  if that's what we mean.

But it is also used from JS. Host objects are exempt from most of the
specific behaviors specified for specific kinds of native objects. Were a
host object to be able to allege to be a kind of native object without
behaving as that kind of native object behaves, that would be bad.



 Implementations don't agree; when calling `Object.prototype.toString`
 with a host object, the result will often be one of those values.

  Object.prototype.toString.call(alert);

 results either [object Function] or [object Object]. That behavior
 is allowed in ES3, but why not in ES5? ES5 seems to defy what most (if
 not all) implementations do there.


As far as ES5 is concerned, an implementation is perfectly allowed to have
alert's [[Class]] be Function, iff alert on that platform is a function,
i.e., behaves as a function is obligated to behave. In fact, I think that is
the most reasonable choice. If alert on a given implementation is instead a
host object, then it has almost no rules governing its behavior. We don't
wish it to be able to claim otherwise.

I have not yet seen any draft of the new WebIDL bindings for ES5. These may
very well determine whether alert is a host object or a native function, as
far as w3c specs are concerned. Either decision would be allowed by ES5.



 Some host objects including `alert` are implemented as a native
 ECMAScript objects (`alert instanceof Function`). In that case, the
 [[Class]] property should be Function.



(alert instanceof Function) is not a reliable test in either direction. A
host object as well as a native non-function is perfectly free to inherit
from Function.prototype and thus pass this test. And an actual function may
be an instance of Function constructor from another frame and so fail the
test. But yes, iff alert is indeed a native function, it's [[Class]] should
be Function.




 However according to ES5 specs, any host object must not be withing

the set of values that are not allowable and so the assertion could be
 made that if any object has a [[Class]] that is one of those values,
 then the object is not a host object.


Yes, that is intentional.



 An `isHostObject` method could
 be written using a RegExp:

 // DO NOT USE
 var _toString = Object.prototype.toString,
nativeClasses =
 /Array|Boolean|Date|Error|Function|JSON|Math|Number|Object|RegExp|String/;

 function isHostMethod(m) {
  return !nativeClasses.test(.call(m));
 }


Surely you meant _toString.call(m)? And of the two names above, I think
asHostObject is more appropriate, as it applies whether m is method-like or
not.

Other than those typos, this code looks fine. Once one has determined that
the platform is ES5, I think this code is perfectly good to use.


 However, we know that won't hold true in many cases more than just `alert`.


Any implementation in which this doesn't hold is not a conformant ES5
implementation, and shouldn't claim otherwise.



 Is the specification wrong here or what am I missing?

 Garrett
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-- 
Cheers,
--MarkM
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Re: [[Class]] Property of Host Object

2010-07-17 Thread Garrett Smith
On 7/16/10, Mark S. Miller erig...@google.com wrote:
 On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 9:54 PM, Garrett Smith
 dhtmlkitc...@gmail.comwrote:

 I have a question reqarding [[Class]] property as defined In ES5:

 | The value of the [[Class]] internal property of a host object
 | may be any String value except one of Arguments, Array,
 | Boolean, Date, Error, Function, JSON, Math, Number,
 | Object, RegExp, and String

 May it be something other than a string value? Or must it be a string
 value?


 It must be a string value.


The specification says may.



 Why must a host object's class be none of the built-in classes listed?


 So that the [[Class]] property serve as a reliable nominal type check for
 the contract that the other internal properties and methods satisfy. This is
 used primarily within the spec itself. Previously, it wasn't clear what was
 meant when the spec said, for example, if F is a function. Now we clearly
 say if the [[Class]] of F is 'Function'  if that's what we mean.


I think I see the problem.

What you really want to say there is:

|  The value of the [[Class]] internal property of any non-native host
|  object must be any String value except one of...

Because that allows `alert` to be any native ECMAScript object
(Function, Object, etc), while still letting it be defined as a host
object and not violating that spec. Iff, however, following my
proposed amendment, `alert` had [[Class]] Object, and it was not a
native ES object (as in IE versions), then it would be a specification
violation.

 But it is also used from JS. Host objects are exempt from most of the
 specific behaviors specified for specific kinds of native objects. Were a
 host object to be able to allege to be a kind of native object without
 behaving as that kind of native object behaves, that would be bad.


This is not in the spec:
without behaving as that kind of native object behaves

While the specification does not preclude the possibility that a host
object may be implemented with native semantics, it nonetheless
defines a host object:

| 4.3.8
|  host object
|  object supplied by the host environment to complete the
|  execution environment of ECMAScript.
|
|  NOTE Any object that is not native is a host object.

And that means that `alert`, `window`, `document`, XMLHttpRequest, are
all host objects. Whether or not those objects are implemented as
native ECMAScript objects is another matter altogether.

It seems the the spec is wrong and that you have misinterpreted it. I
believe that instead it should be written:




 Implementations don't agree; when calling `Object.prototype.toString`
 with a host object, the result will often be one of those values.

  Object.prototype.toString.call(alert);

 results either [object Function] or [object Object]. That behavior
 is allowed in ES3, but why not in ES5? ES5 seems to defy what most (if
 not all) implementations do there.


 As far as ES5 is concerned, an implementation is perfectly allowed to have
 alert's [[Class]] be Function, iff alert on that platform is a function,
 i.e., behaves as a function is obligated to behave. In fact, I think that is
 the most reasonable choice. If alert on a given implementation is instead a
 host object, then it has almost no rules governing its behavior. We don't
 wish it to be able to claim otherwise.

 I have not yet seen any draft of the new WebIDL bindings for ES5. These may
 very well determine whether alert is a host object or a native function, as
 far as w3c specs are concerned. Either decision would be allowed by ES5.



 Some host objects including `alert` are implemented as a native
 ECMAScript objects (`alert instanceof Function`). In that case, the
 [[Class]] property should be Function.



 (alert instanceof Function) is not a reliable test in either direction.

No of course not.

A
 host object as well as a native non-function is perfectly free to inherit
 from Function.prototype and thus pass this test. And an actual function may
 be an instance of Function constructor from another frame and so fail the
 test. But yes, iff alert is indeed a native function, it's [[Class]] should
 be Function.


Therein lies a contradiction: A host object here may be a function.
Yet because it is a host object, that same object's [[Class]] must not
be Function, and yet again, since it is a function, and any function
must have [[Class]] Function, then this object's [[Class]] must be
Function.




 However according to ES5 specs, any host object must not be withing

 the set of values that are not allowable and so the assertion could be
 made that if any object has a [[Class]] that is one of those values,
 then the object is not a host object.


 Yes, that is intentional.

Then it will fail today, as

javascript: alert(({}).toString.call(alert))

- will result [object Object] or [object Function]



 Surely you meant _toString.call(m)? And of the two names above, I think

Yes.

 asHostObject is more appropriate, as it applies whether m is 

Re: [[Class]] Property of Host Object

2010-07-17 Thread Mark S. Miller
[+es5-discuss as a possible errata issue arises below]


On Sat, Jul 17, 2010 at 12:37 AM, Garrett Smith dhtmlkitc...@gmail.comwrote:

 On 7/16/10, Mark S. Miller erig...@google.com wrote:
  On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 9:54 PM, Garrett Smith
  dhtmlkitc...@gmail.comwrote:
 
  I have a question reqarding [[Class]] property as defined In ES5:
 
  | The value of the [[Class]] internal property of a host object
  | may be any String value except one of Arguments, Array,
  | Boolean, Date, Error, Function, JSON, Math, Number,
  | Object, RegExp, and String
 
  May it be something other than a string value? Or must it be a string
  value?
 
 
  It must be a string value.
 

 The specification says may.


Ah. I see the ambiguity. may there is modifying any. It should probably
have been stated:

...must be a String value and may be any String value except...

In reviewing the document, the possibility that text would allow non-String
[[Class]]es had not occurred to me. Now that you point it out, and can see
some reasons why we might want to leave the current text alone and allow
non-String [[Class]]es.




 
 
  Why must a host object's class be none of the built-in classes listed?
 
 
  So that the [[Class]] property serve as a reliable nominal type check for
  the contract that the other internal properties and methods satisfy. This
 is
  used primarily within the spec itself. Previously, it wasn't clear what
 was
  meant when the spec said, for example, if F is a function. Now we
 clearly
  say if the [[Class]] of F is 'Function'  if that's what we mean.
 

 I think I see the problem.

 What you really want to say there is:

 |  The value of the [[Class]] internal property of any non-native host
 |  object must be any String value except one of...


Saying non-native and host together is redundant. Although the language
of 4.3.6 and 4.3.8 is not as clear as it should be, I read these as stating
that all EcmaScript objects are either host or native. No object can be both
host and native. And no object can be neither host nor native.




 Because that allows `alert` to be any native ECMAScript object
 (Function, Object, etc), while still letting it be defined as a host
 object and not violating that spec.



that spec? What specification demands that alert be a host object? I have
not heard of any. This might be a consequence of the upcoming WebIDL-to-ES5
language bindings, but I have seen no draft and so have no idea. My own
preference would be for these language bindings to result in alert being a
native Function, but that's an argument for a different standards committee
;).

If an implementation's alert is a Function, then it is a native object and
its [[Class]] must be Function. It can still be an object provided by a
host environment whose [[Call]] behavior is written in C++. This simply
makes it a host provided native built-in object (4.3.7), not a host object.




 Iff, however, following my
 proposed amendment, `alert` had [[Class]] Object, and it was not a
 native ES object (as in IE versions), then it would be a specification
 violation.

  But it is also used from JS. Host objects are exempt from most of the
  specific behaviors specified for specific kinds of native objects. Were a
  host object to be able to allege to be a kind of native object without
  behaving as that kind of native object behaves, that would be bad.
 

 This is not in the spec:
 without behaving as that kind of native object behaves


See 4.3.6.



 While the specification does not preclude the possibility that a host
 object may be implemented with native semantics, it nonetheless
 defines a host object:

 | 4.3.8
 |  host object
 |  object supplied by the host environment to complete the
 |  execution environment of ECMAScript.
 |
 |  NOTE Any object that is not native is a host object.

 And that means that `alert`, `window`, `document`, XMLHttpRequest, are
 all host objects. Whether or not those objects are implemented as
 native ECMAScript objects is another matter altogether.


This is the crux. The language there is indeed poorly phrased. But native
objects are not host objects.

Indeed, it is so poorly phrased that perhaps we should add an errata to
clean this up. Sigh. cc'ing es5-discuss.



 It seems the the spec is wrong and that you have misinterpreted it. I
 believe that instead it should be written:


Text missing?




 
 
  Implementations don't agree; when calling `Object.prototype.toString`
  with a host object, the result will often be one of those values.
 
   Object.prototype.toString.call(alert);
 
  results either [object Function] or [object Object]. That behavior
  is allowed in ES3, but why not in ES5? ES5 seems to defy what most (if
  not all) implementations do there.
 
 
  As far as ES5 is concerned, an implementation is perfectly allowed to
 have
  alert's [[Class]] be Function, iff alert on that platform is a
 function,
  i.e., behaves as a function is obligated to behave. In fact, I think that
 is

Re: [[Class]] Property of Host Object

2010-07-17 Thread Garrett Smith
On 7/17/10, Mark S. Miller erig...@google.com wrote:
 [+es5-discuss as a possible errata issue arises below]


 On Sat, Jul 17, 2010 at 12:37 AM, Garrett Smith
 dhtmlkitc...@gmail.comwrote:

 On 7/16/10, Mark S. Miller erig...@google.com wrote:
  On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 9:54 PM, Garrett Smith
  dhtmlkitc...@gmail.comwrote:
 
  I have a question reqarding [[Class]] property as defined In ES5:
 
  | The value of the [[Class]] internal property of a host object
  | may be any String value except one of Arguments, Array,
  | Boolean, Date, Error, Function, JSON, Math, Number,
  | Object, RegExp, and String
 
  May it be something other than a string value? Or must it be a string
  value?
 
 
  It must be a string value.
 

 The specification says may.


 Ah. I see the ambiguity. may there is modifying any. It should probably
 have been stated:

 ...must be a String value and may be any String value except...

 In reviewing the document, the possibility that text would allow non-String
 [[Class]]es had not occurred to me. Now that you point it out, and can see
 some reasons why we might want to leave the current text alone and allow
 non-String [[Class]]es.


I don't.

[[Class]] must be a string value. If the [[Class]] property is absent,
what happens when the object is supplied to Object.prototype.toString?
TypeError. Why not avoid that possibility and require host object to
have [[Class]] be a string value?




 
 
  Why must a host object's class be none of the built-in classes listed?
 
 
  So that the [[Class]] property serve as a reliable nominal type check
  for
  the contract that the other internal properties and methods satisfy.
  This
 is
  used primarily within the spec itself. Previously, it wasn't clear what
 was
  meant when the spec said, for example, if F is a function. Now we
 clearly
  say if the [[Class]] of F is 'Function'  if that's what we mean.
 

 I think I see the problem.

 What you really want to say there is:

 |  The value of the [[Class]] internal property of any non-native host
 |  object must be any String value except one of...


 Saying non-native and host together is redundant. Although the language
 of 4.3.6 and 4.3.8 is not as clear as it should be, I read these as stating
 that all EcmaScript objects are either host or native. No object can be both
 host and native. And no object can be neither host nor native.


It is not redundant. Repeating what was written in my last message:

|  While the specification does not preclude the possibility that a host
|  object may be implemented with native semantics, it nonetheless
|  defines a host object:


I understand that the values for [[Class]] are used internally by the
specification. One example of that is Array.isArray(x), where the
[[Class]] property is used internally. Another example is behavior for
`JSON` reviver.

The specification allows for two types of host objects:
 * host objects as native objects
 * host objects as not native objects (does not use native semantics)

From the implementors point of view, what matters the ability derive
an inference from [[Class]]; if [[Class]] is x then [action]. However,
from a programmer's perspective, `Object.prototype.toString.call(x)`
cannot discriminate between objects originating in the host
environment (what is currently defined as host object) and native
objects. Mostly they shouldn't care, but should follow the
specification approach to derive [[Class]] based inference, however
they can't follow that because that is not compatible with existing
implementations (notably IE versions and Opera (which copied IE)), and
making an isStrict supported global flag is not going to provide a
closely related inference about various types of host objects across a
wide range of implementations in the wild.

Internet Explorer 9 host objects seem to be absent of problems seen in
previous versions of IE but there are still host objects that are
callable, have [[Class]] Object, and are not implemented with native
semantics. Two examples of such object are alert and addEventListener.




 Because that allows `alert` to be any native ECMAScript object
 (Function, Object, etc), while still letting it be defined as a host
 object and not violating that spec.



 that spec? What specification demands that alert be a host object? I have

I cited 4.3.8; the definition of host object.

 not heard of any. This might be a consequence of the upcoming WebIDL-to-ES5
 language bindings, but I have seen no draft and so have no idea. My own
 preference would be for these language bindings to result in alert being a
 native Function, but that's an argument for a different standards committee
 ;).

 If an implementation's alert is a Function, then it is a native object and
 its [[Class]] must be Function. It can still be an object provided by a
 host environment whose [[Call]] behavior is written in C++. This simply
 makes it a host provided native built-in object (4.3.7), not a host object.


No, alert is 

Re: [[Class]] Property of Host Object

2010-07-17 Thread Mark S. Miller
In short, I largely agree with you about the language in the ES5 spec text.
My interpretation of that text derives in large part from my memories of the
conversations that led up to it, and my sense of the intent we were trying
to capture. In the absence of that context, I would probably arrive at the
same reading of ES5 that you have.

At this point, I will wait until others who participated in those
conversations weigh in and state their sense of our agreed intent. Once we
understand what agreed intent there actually was, we can proceed from
there.


On Sat, Jul 17, 2010 at 12:17 PM, Garrett Smith dhtmlkitc...@gmail.comwrote:

 On 7/17/10, Mark S. Miller erig...@google.com wrote:
  [+es5-discuss as a possible errata issue arises below]
 
 
  On Sat, Jul 17, 2010 at 12:37 AM, Garrett Smith
  dhtmlkitc...@gmail.comwrote:
 
  On 7/16/10, Mark S. Miller erig...@google.com wrote:
   On Fri, Jul 16, 2010 at 9:54 PM, Garrett Smith
   dhtmlkitc...@gmail.comwrote:
  
   I have a question reqarding [[Class]] property as defined In ES5:
  
   | The value of the [[Class]] internal property of a host object
   | may be any String value except one of Arguments, Array,
   | Boolean, Date, Error, Function, JSON, Math, Number,
   | Object, RegExp, and String
  
   May it be something other than a string value? Or must it be a string
   value?
  
  
   It must be a string value.
  
 
  The specification says may.
 
 
  Ah. I see the ambiguity. may there is modifying any. It should
 probably
  have been stated:
 
  ...must be a String value and may be any String value except...
 
  In reviewing the document, the possibility that text would allow
 non-String
  [[Class]]es had not occurred to me. Now that you point it out, and can
 see
  some reasons why we might want to leave the current text alone and allow
  non-String [[Class]]es.
 

 I don't.

 [[Class]] must be a string value. If the [[Class]] property is absent,
 what happens when the object is supplied to Object.prototype.toString?
 TypeError. Why not avoid that possibility and require host object to
 have [[Class]] be a string value?

 
 
 
  
  
   Why must a host object's class be none of the built-in classes
 listed?
  
  
   So that the [[Class]] property serve as a reliable nominal type check
   for
   the contract that the other internal properties and methods satisfy.
   This
  is
   used primarily within the spec itself. Previously, it wasn't clear
 what
  was
   meant when the spec said, for example, if F is a function. Now we
  clearly
   say if the [[Class]] of F is 'Function'  if that's what we mean.
  
 
  I think I see the problem.
 
  What you really want to say there is:
 
  |  The value of the [[Class]] internal property of any non-native host
  |  object must be any String value except one of...
 
 
  Saying non-native and host together is redundant. Although the
 language
  of 4.3.6 and 4.3.8 is not as clear as it should be, I read these as
 stating
  that all EcmaScript objects are either host or native. No object can be
 both
  host and native. And no object can be neither host nor native.
 

 It is not redundant. Repeating what was written in my last message:

 |  While the specification does not preclude the possibility that a host
 |  object may be implemented with native semantics, it nonetheless
 |  defines a host object:


 I understand that the values for [[Class]] are used internally by the
 specification. One example of that is Array.isArray(x), where the
 [[Class]] property is used internally. Another example is behavior for
 `JSON` reviver.

 The specification allows for two types of host objects:
  * host objects as native objects
  * host objects as not native objects (does not use native semantics)

 From the implementors point of view, what matters the ability derive
 an inference from [[Class]]; if [[Class]] is x then [action]. However,
 from a programmer's perspective, `Object.prototype.toString.call(x)`
 cannot discriminate between objects originating in the host
 environment (what is currently defined as host object) and native
 objects. Mostly they shouldn't care, but should follow the
 specification approach to derive [[Class]] based inference, however
 they can't follow that because that is not compatible with existing
 implementations (notably IE versions and Opera (which copied IE)), and
 making an isStrict supported global flag is not going to provide a
 closely related inference about various types of host objects across a
 wide range of implementations in the wild.

 Internet Explorer 9 host objects seem to be absent of problems seen in
 previous versions of IE but there are still host objects that are
 callable, have [[Class]] Object, and are not implemented with native
 semantics. Two examples of such object are alert and addEventListener.

 
 
 
  Because that allows `alert` to be any native ECMAScript object
  (Function, Object, etc), while still letting it be defined as a host
  object and not violating that 

[[Class]] Property of Host Object

2010-07-16 Thread Garrett Smith
I have a question reqarding [[Class]] property as defined In ES5:

| The value of the [[Class]] internal property of a host object
| may be any String value except one of Arguments, Array,
| Boolean, Date, Error, Function, JSON, Math, Number,
| Object, RegExp, and String

May it be something other than a string value? Or must it be a string value?

Why must a host object's class be none of the built-in classes listed?
Implementations don't agree; when calling `Object.prototype.toString`
with a host object, the result will often be one of those values.

  Object.prototype.toString.call(alert);

results either [object Function] or [object Object]. That behavior
is allowed in ES3, but why not in ES5? ES5 seems to defy what most (if
not all) implementations do there.

Some host objects including `alert` are implemented as a native
ECMAScript objects (`alert instanceof Function`). In that case, the
[[Class]] property should be Function.

However according to ES5 specs, any host object must not be withing
the set of values that are not allowable and so the assertion could be
made that if any object has a [[Class]] that is one of those values,
then the object is not a host object. An `isHostObject` method could
be written using a RegExp:

// DO NOT USE
var _toString = Object.prototype.toString,
nativeClasses =
/Array|Boolean|Date|Error|Function|JSON|Math|Number|Object|RegExp|String/;

function isHostMethod(m) {
  return !nativeClasses.test(.call(m));
}

However, we know that won't hold true in many cases more than just `alert`.

Is the specification wrong here or what am I missing?

Garrett
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