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What Does Array.prototype.slice.call() & Wrapper.querySelectorAll() Do?

I found following cone in a js plugin var container = document.getElementById( 'vs-container' ), wrapper = container.querySelector( 'div.vs-wrapper' ), sections = Array.prototype.s

Solution 1:

querySelectorAll is a method on DOM elements that accepts a CSS selector and returns a static NodeList of matching elements.

Array.prototype.slice.call is one way to turn that NodeList (which acts like an array, but doesn’t have the methods from Array.prototype) into a real array.

Give it a try on this page in your browser’s console!

> var headers = document.querySelectorAll('h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6');
undefined
> headers.map(function(el) { return el.textContent; })
TypeError: Object #<NodeList> has no method 'map'
> headers = Array.prototype.slice.call(headers);
…
> headers.map(function(el) { return el.textContent; })
["What does Array.prototype.slice.call() & wrapper.querySelectorAll() do?", …]

Solution 2:

It creates an array from anything array-like (e.g., that has a length and properties with names like 0, 1, etc.). You see it a lot with getElementsByTagName and such, which return live NodeList instances. It's not really necessary with querySelectorAll, because that returns non-live lists, unless of course you want all the features of Array.

That Array.prototype.slice.call(...) can look a bit intimidating, but it's actually quite simple: Arrays get their methods from the object Array.prototype. One of those is the slice method that returns a copy of a portion of the array. If you don't give slice any arguments, it returns a copy of the entire array. But the tricky bit is that when you call slice, you don't have to call it on an array, just something that looks array-like. When you use Function#call in JavaScript, you can set what this is within the call. So Array.prototype.slice.call(resultFromQuerySelectorAll) calls slice with this being the result from querySelectorAll; slice then obligingly gives you an array with those entries.


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