function
keyword, followed by
square
:
function square(number) {The function
return number * number;
}
square
takes one argument, called number
. The function consists of one statement that indicates to return the argument of the function multiplied by itself. The return
statement specifies the value returned by the function.
return number * number
All parameters are passed to functions by value; the value is passed to the function, but if the function changes the value of the parameter, this change is not reflected globally or in the calling function. However, if you pass an object as a parameter to a function and the function changes the object's properties, that change is visible outside the function, as shown in the following example:
function myFunc(theObject) {In addition to defining functions as described here, you can also define
theObject.make="Toyota"
}
mycar = {make:"Honda", model:"Accord", year:1998}
x=mycar.make // returns Honda
myFunc(mycar) // pass object mycar to the function
y=mycar.make // returns Toyota (prop was changed by the function)
Function
objects, as described in "Function Object" on page 114.
A method is a function associated with an object. You'll learn more about objects and methods in Chapter 7, "Working with Objects."
square
, you could call it as follows.
square(5)The preceding statement calls the function with an argument of five. The function executes its statements and returns the value twenty-five. The arguments of a function are not limited to strings and numbers. You can pass whole objects to a function, too. The
show_props
function (defined in "Objects and Properties" on page 100) is an example of a function that takes an object as an argument.
A function can even be recursive, that is, it can call itself. For example, here is a function that computes factorials:
function factorial(n) {You could then compute the factorials of one through five as follows:
if ((n == 0) || (n == 1))
return 1
else {
result = (n * factorial(n-1) )
return result
}
}
a=factorial(1) // returns 1
b=factorial(2) // returns 2
c=factorial(3) // returns 6
d=factorial(4) // returns 24
e=factorial(5) // returns 120
arguments[i]where
functionName.arguments[i]
i
is the ordinal number of the argument, starting at zero. So, the first argument passed to a function would be arguments[0]
. The total number of arguments is indicated by arguments.length
.
Using the arguments
array, you can call a function with more arguments than it is formally declared to accept. This is often useful if you don't know in advance how many arguments will be passed to the function. You can use arguments.length
to determine the number of arguments actually passed to the function, and then treat each argument using the arguments
array.
For example, consider a function that concatenates several strings. The only formal argument for the function is a string that specifies the characters that separate the items to concatenate. The function is defined as follows:
function myConcat(separator) {You can pass any number of arguments to this function, and it creates a list using each argument as an item in the list.
result="" // initialize list
// iterate through arguments
for (var i=1; i<arguments.length; i++) {
result += arguments[i] + separator
}
return result
}
// returns "red, orange, blue, "
myConcat(", ","red","orange","blue")
// returns "elephant; giraffe; lion; cheetah;"
myConcat("; ","elephant","giraffe","lion", "cheetah")
// returns "sage. basil. oregano. pepper. parsley. "See the
myConcat(". ","sage","basil","oregano", "pepper", "parsley")
Function
object in the Client-Side JavaScript Reference for more information.
eval
function evaluates a string of JavaScript code without reference to a particular object. The syntax of eval
is:
eval(expr)where
expr
is a string to be evaluated.
If the string represents an expression, eval
evaluates the expression. If the argument represents one or more JavaScript statements, eval
performs the statements. Do not call eval
to evaluate an arithmetic expression; JavaScript evaluates arithmetic expressions automatically.
isFinite
is:
isFinite(number)where
number
is the number to evaluate.
If the argument is NaN
, positive infinity or negative infinity, this method returns false
, otherwise it returns true
.
The following code checks client input to determine whether it is a finite number.
if(isFinite(ClientInput) == true)
{
/* take specific steps */
}
isNaN
function evaluates an argument to determine if it is "NaN" (not a number). The syntax of isNaN
is:
isNaN(testValue)where
testValue
is the value you want to evaluate.
The parseFloat
and parseInt
functions return "NaN" when they evaluate a value that is not a number. isNaN
returns true if passed "NaN," and false otherwise.
The following code evaluates floatValue
to determine if it is a number and then calls a procedure accordingly:
floatValue=parseFloat(toFloat)
if (isNaN(floatValue)) {
notFloat()
} else {
isFloat()
}
parseInt
and parseFloat
, return a numeric value when given a string as an argument.
The syntax of parseFloat
is
parseFloat(str)where
parseFloat
parses its argument, the string str
, and attempts to return a floating-point number. If it encounters a character other than a sign (+ or -), a numeral (0-9), a decimal point, or an exponent, then it returns the value up to that point and ignores that character and all succeeding characters. If the first character cannot be converted to a number, it returns "NaN" (not a number).
The syntax of parseInt
is
parseInt(str [, radix])
parseInt
parses its first argument, the string str
, and attempts to return an integer of the specified radix
(base), indicated by the second, optional argument, radix
. For example, a radix of ten indicates to convert to a decimal number, eight octal, sixteen hexadecimal, and so on. For radixes above ten, the letters of the alphabet indicate numerals greater than nine. For example, for hexadecimal numbers (base 16), A through F are used.
If parseInt
encounters a character that is not a numeral in the specified radix, it ignores it and all succeeding characters and returns the integer value parsed up to that point. If the first character cannot be converted to a number in the specified radix, it returns "NaN." The parseInt
function truncates the string to integer values.
Number
and String
functions let you convert an object to a number or a string. The syntax of these functions is:
Number(objRef)where
String(objRef)
objRef
is an object reference.
The following example converts the Date
object to a readable string.
D = new Date (430054663215)
// The following returns
// "Thu Aug 18 04:37:43 GMT-0700 (Pacific Daylight Time) 1983"
x = String(D)
escape
and unescape
functions let you encode and decode strings. The escape
function returns the hexadecimal encoding of an argument in the ISO Latin character set. The unescape
function returns the ASCII string for the specified hexadecimal encoding value.
The syntax of these functions is:
escape(string)These functions are used primarily with server-side JavaScript to encode and decode name/value pairs in URLs.
unescape(string)
Last Updated: 05/27/99 21:21:27