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RegExp.prototype.matches = function* (str) { | |
let moreThanOnce = this.global || this.sticky; | |
let myLastIndex = 0; | |
do { | |
// preserve lastIndex of another .exec() calls on same regexp | |
let savedLastIndex = this.lastIndex; | |
// use own state for lastIndex to match our str | |
this.lastIndex = myLastIndex; | |
let match = this.exec(str); |
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function valueRange(start, end) { | |
return function (value) { | |
return Math.min(Math.max(value, start), end); | |
}; | |
} | |
//Get new value range [0, 20] | |
var f = valueRange(0, 20); | |
console.log(f(10)); //10 |
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function func(a, f) { | |
return function (args) { | |
args.__proto__ = a; | |
f.call(this, args); | |
}; | |
}; | |
var f = func({foo : 10, bar : 20}, function (args) { | |
print(args.foo, args.bar); |
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// In ECMA-262 5th edition all methods of Array.prototype are intentionally generic. It means if you pass different | |
// native object than array for the this value, the particular method will work in same way as for array instances. | |
// ECMA-262 does not define how those methods will work if you pass a host object for the this value. That behavior // is implementation dependent. | |
// For example: | |
var arr = []; | |
Array.prototype.push.call(arr, 1, 2); | |
arr[0]; //1 | |
arr[1]; //2 |