2
0
Herbert Vojčík a290875e3a Removed executable flags. 11 rokov pred
..
tests a290875e3a Removed executable flags. 11 rokov pred
.gitignore a290875e3a Removed executable flags. 11 rokov pred
CHANGES a290875e3a Removed executable flags. 11 rokov pred
CONTRIBUTORS.md a290875e3a Removed executable flags. 11 rokov pred
LICENSE a290875e3a Removed executable flags. 11 rokov pred
README.md a290875e3a Removed executable flags. 11 rokov pred
es5-sham.js a290875e3a Removed executable flags. 11 rokov pred
es5-sham.min.js a290875e3a Removed executable flags. 11 rokov pred
es5-shim.js a290875e3a Removed executable flags. 11 rokov pred
es5-shim.min.js a290875e3a Removed executable flags. 11 rokov pred
minify 09fc6dab27 Add es5-shim v2.0.2 in order to fix IE8 / IE7 compatibility. 12 rokov pred
package.json a290875e3a Removed executable flags. 11 rokov pred

README.md

es5-shim.js and es5-shim.min.js monkey-patch a JavaScript context to contain all EcmaScript 5 methods that can be faithfully emulated with a legacy JavaScript engine.

es5-sham.js and es5-sham.min.js monkey-patch other ES5 methods as closely as possible. For these methods, as closely as possible to ES5 is not very close. Many of these shams are intended only to allow code to be written to ES5 without causing run-time errors in older engines. In many cases, this means that these shams cause many ES5 methods to silently fail. Decide carefully whether this is what you want.

Tests

The tests are written with the Jasmine BDD test framework. To run the tests, navigate to /tests/.

In order to run against the shim-code, the tests attempt to kill the current implementation of the missing methods. This happens in /tests/helpers/h-kill.js. So in order to run the tests against the build-in methods, invalidate that file somehow (comment-out, delete the file, delete the script-tag, etc.).

Shims

Complete tests

  • Array.prototype.every
  • Array.prototype.filter
  • Array.prototype.forEach
  • Array.prototype.indexOf
  • Array.prototype.lastIndexOf
  • Array.prototype.map
  • Array.prototype.some
  • Array.prototype.reduce
  • Array.prototype.reduceRight
  • Array.isArray
  • Date.now
  • Date.prototype.toJSON
  • Function.prototype.bind
    • /!\ Caveat: the bound function's length is always 0.
    • /!\ Caveat: the bound function has a prototype property.
    • /!\ Caveat: bound functions do not try too hard to keep you from manipulating their arguments and caller properties.
    • /!\ Caveat: bound functions don't have checks in call and apply to avoid executing as a constructor.
  • Object.keys
  • String.prototype.trim

Untested

  • Date.parse (for ISO parsing)
  • Date.prototype.toISOString

Shams

  • /?\ Object.create

    For the case of simply "begetting" an object that inherits prototypically from another, this should work fine across legacy engines.

    /!\ Object.create(null) will work only in browsers that support prototype assignment. This creates an object that does not have any properties inherited from Object.prototype. It will silently fail otherwise.

    /!\ The second argument is passed to Object.defineProperties which will probably fail silently.

  • /?\ Object.getPrototypeOf

    This will return "undefined" in some cases. It uses proto if it's available. Failing that, it uses constructor.prototype, which depends on the constructor property of the object's prototype having not been replaced. If your object was created like this, it won't work:

    function Foo() {
    }
    Foo.prototype = {};
    

    Because the prototype reassignment destroys the constructor property.

    This will work for all objects that were created using Object.create implemented with this library.

  • /!\ Object.getOwnPropertyNames

    This method uses Object.keys, so it will not be accurate on legacy engines.

  • Object.isSealed

    Returns "false" in all legacy engines for all objects, which is conveniently guaranteed to be accurate.

  • Object.isFrozen

    Returns "false" in all legacy engines for all objects, which is conveniently guaranteed to be accurate.

  • Object.isExtensible

    Works like a charm, by trying very hard to extend the object then redacting the extension.

Fail silently

  • /!\ Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptor

    The behavior of this shim does not conform to ES5. It should probably not be used at this time, until its behavior has been reviewed and been confirmed to be useful in legacy engines.

  • /!\ Object.defineProperty

    This method will silently fail to set "writable", "enumerable", and "configurable" properties.

    Providing a getter or setter with "get" or "set" on a descriptor will silently fail on engines that lack "defineGetter" and "defineSetter", which include all versions of IE up to version 8 so far.

    IE 8 provides a version of this method but it only works on DOM objects. Thus, the shim will not get installed and attempts to set "value" properties will fail silently on non-DOM objects.

    https://github.com/kriskowal/es5-shim/issues#issue/5

  • /!\ Object.defineProperties

    This uses the Object.defineProperty shim

  • Object.seal

    Silently fails on all legacy engines. This should be fine unless you are depending on the safety and security provisions of this method, which you cannot possibly obtain in legacy engines.

  • Object.freeze

    Silently fails on all legacy engines. This should be fine unless you are depending on the safety and security provisions of this method, which you cannot possibly obtain in legacy engines.

  • Object.preventExtensions

    Silently fails on all legacy engines. This should be fine unless you are depending on the safety and security provisions of this method, which you cannot possibly obtain in legacy engines.