First Example:
In the following example: http://jsfiddle.net/maniator/ScTAW/4/
I have this js:
var storage = (function () {
var store = [];
return {
"add": function (item) {
store.push(item);
},
"get": function () {
return store;
}
};
}());
storage.add('hi there')
console.log(storage, storage.get(), storage.add('hi there #2'));
And here is what gets printed to the console:
Object ["hi there", "hi there #2"] undefined
One would think that the console should only say:
Object ["hi there"] undefined
becase the second push did not happen until after the value was logged, therefore it should not be displayed.
Second Example:
In the following example: http://jsfiddle.net/maniator/ScTAW/5/
I am using the same storage
variable but I log like so:
storage.add('hi there')
console.log(storage, storage.get(), (function() {
storage.add('hi there #2');
console.log('TESTING');
})());
What gets printed to the console is:
TESTING
Object ["hi there", "hi there #2"] undefined
hmmmm well that is odd now isnt it? One could expect to see:
Object ["hi there"] undefined
TESTING
Why is this happening? What is going on behind the scenes of the console logging mechanism?
When you're calling
console.log
like thisstorage.add('hi there #2')
is evaluated and the return value is passed toconsole.log
. Evaluating it causes the array item to be added tostore
immediately.Same thing with
storage.get()
->store
. So effectively, the statement becomes:When it prints,
store
is evaluated and its content are output which is why you see["hi there", "hi there #2"]
In your second example also, the anonymous function is evaluated first and the results are passed on.
All arguments to
console.log
will first be iterated and evaluated in order to assemble the output. As it is iterating the arguments you've passed, changes are made to objects and functions are called. After the logger has iterated the arguments, it outputs the data.Because objects are byRef, your "second argument" changes to the
storage.store
object are reflected in the console output. Because the arguments are iterated, the function call in your last argument is called before the output is assembled, so you see the output from your function call before you see the output of the firstconsole.log
call.It is worth noting, then, that the output of
console.log
is not going to show you objects as they exist at the time of the call toconsole.log
. What you actually get, in the case of objects, is a reference handle to the object. Thus, any changes to the object made after the handle has been added toconsole.log
's output will still be reflected in the object itself. Since the handle only points to the object itself, you are not getting output showing the state of the object as it was when you called the function, but rather a live link to the object as it is now.In most (if not all) imperative programming languages, any arguments passed to a function call have to be evaluated before the function can be called (so called Eager evaluation). Also, they are in general evaluated in order from left to right (for C for instance it's undefined), however in both examples the order in which the arguments are evaluated does not matter. This should be pretty obvious when looking at what happens in detail:
As mentioned, before
console.log
can be called,storage.get()
has to be executed first, returning thestore
array. Thenstorage.add('hi there #2')
will be executed (or the other way round), so its result (in this caseundefined
, sinceadd
does not return anything) can be passed as the third argument toconsole.log
. This means that the onceconsole.log
will be called with the arguments(storage, storage.store, undefined)
, thestore
array already contains "hi there #2", hence producing the results you observe.In the second example the reasoning is again the same, the function call is just a bit more obscured. On first look it looks there is a function passed as a 3rd argument to the
console.log
function; but it's actually a function call (observer the()
at the end). Sostorage.add('hi there #2')
will be executed, thenconsole.log('TESTING')
and then theundefined
result from the anonymous function execution will be again passed toconsole.log
.If you did actually pass a function to
console.log
, it would print that function definition, and not execute anything. So:, without the
()
at the end, results in:I hope this makes things a bit clearer.
Your storage adding function is completely evaluated before
console.log
is called because it's a parameter.This is not specific to
console.log
, this is how every imperative programming language works.