What is the dollar sign in Javascript, if not jQuery
I did some javascript / jQuery programming a few years ago, and I just started up again. Back then the dollar sign was used for all the jQuery functionality, and if no jQuery library was imported, the dollar sign was not defined.
Today, I started up Firefox, in a completely empty html file with no javascript libraries, and yet the dollar sign points to something. If I open the Firefox console and type '$' I get "function()"
.
1) Is it correct that dollar sign was not assigned, a few years back, or do I remember wrong?
2) What is the dollar sign, if not jQuery?
1) Is it correct that dollar sign was not assigned, a few years back, or do I remember wrong?
That's correct and still true.
2) What is the dollar sign, if not jQuery?
Firefox and Chrome implement $
, $$
and several others as helper commands. Both will set $$
to document.querySelectorAll()
, and set $
to document.querySelector
if window.$
hasn't been defined.
So what you're seeing isn't actually standard JavaScript, but a helper in the developer console of your browser. It's also not jQuery (as long as you're not on a page using jQuery). However, it's behaviour is close to the one of jQuery
, concerning that querySelector
(for single matches) and querySelectorAll
(for multiple matches) give you almost the same strength as the jQuery selector.
It means nothing to the interpreter just like the underscore
From the ECMAScript specification:
The dollar sign ($) and the underscore (_) are permitted anywhere in an identifier. The dollar sign is intended for use only in mechanically generated code.
You may also check JavaScript Dollar Sign ($) - What is it for?
By convention, the dollar sign ($), the underscore (_) and even some ASCII character are permitted to be used anywhere in a JavaScript identifier (Source: Ecma Script documentation (7.6 Identifiers, ECMA-262, 3rd Ed.) the dollar sign is intended for use only in mechanically generated code. This means that we do not want to use the dollar sign ($) in our indentifier names, unless we are writing a framework. The following is a list of permitted characters that can be used anywhere in an identifier name:
IdentifierName ::
IdentifierStart
IdentifierName IdentifierPart
IdentifierStart ::
UnicodeLetter
$
_
UnicodeEscapeSequence
IdentifierPart ::
IdentifierStart
UnicodeCombiningMark
UnicodeDigit
UnicodeConnectorPunctuation
UnicodeEscapeSequence
EDIT:-
Actually dollar sign function has become the more-or-less de facto shortcut to document.getElementById()
.
To confirm my point check this:
$(selector)
Returns a single element matching the given CSS selector. In old Firebug versions, this used to be equivalent to document.getElementById.
Dollar sign($)
was not assigned, but some browser add function for special usage.
Like Google Chrome, if you type $
on the console, it will return :
function $(selector, [startNode]) { [Command Line API] }
This function assigned for Google Chrome Developer Tool, and let debug more easier.
if you type $('div')
, it will return something like this:
e.fn.e.init[178]
and include every div
DOM object in it.
BTW, after you click the right button on the mouse to select element, you can acceess angular.js scope by type $scope
on the console
Note that $$
isn't quite document.querySelectorAll
, because unlike that function it doesn’t return a NodeList
:
document.body.querySelectorAll('p') instanceof NodeList
true
$$('p') instanceof NodeList
false
Array.isArray($$('p'))
true
So $$(selector)
is really more like Array.from(document.querySelectorAll(selector))
. This means that array methods like .forEach
and friends are available on $$
, which is actually quite useful.
It may be anything, as $
is a valid variable name, just like dollar
.
From ECMAScript :
Identifier ::
IdentifierName but not ReservedWord
IdentifierName ::
IdentifierStart
IdentifierName IdentifierPart
IdentifierStart ::
UnicodeLetter
$
_
\ UnicodeEscapeSequence
The simplest solution to see what it is and where it is defined would probably to type $()
and to put a breakpoint on this line.
Just to complete the other answers here, MooTools also uses $
as a alias to document.getElementById
.
It does check if the $
is taken and will then default to document.id
.
참고URL : https://stackoverflow.com/questions/22244823/what-is-the-dollar-sign-in-javascript-if-not-jquery
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