JavaScript 2.0
Core Language
Expressions
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Monday, June 30, 2003

Most of the behavior of expressions is the same as in JavaScript 1.5. Differences are highlighted below.

  {allowInnoIn}

Identifiers

Identifier 
   Identifier
|  get
|  set
|  include

The above keywords are not reserved and may be used in identifiers.

Qualified Identifiers

SimpleQualifiedIdentifier 
   Identifier
|  Identifier :: Identifier
|  ReservedNamespace :: Identifier
ExpressionQualifiedIdentifier  ParenExpression :: Identifier
QualifiedIdentifier 
   SimpleQualifiedIdentifier
|  ExpressionQualifiedIdentifier

Just like in ECMAScript Edition 3, an identifier evaluates to an internal data structure called a reference. However, JavaScript 2.0 references can be qualified by a qualifier, which, in the general syntax, is a ParenExpression that evaluates to a namespace. For convenience, if the ParenExpression consists of a single identifier, the parentheses may be omitted: (a)::m may be written as a::m.

The reserved words public and private may also be used as qualifiers. public evaluates to the public namespace. internal (which is not a reserved word) evaluates to the containing package’s anonymous namespace. private can only be used inside a class and evaluates to the containing class’s anonymous namespace.

See the name lookup section for more information on the :: operator.

Primary Expressions

PrimaryExpression 
   null
|  true
|  false
|  Number
|  String
|  this
|  RegularExpression
|  ReservedNamespace
|  ParenListExpression
|  ArrayLiteral
|  ObjectLiteral
|  FunctionExpression
ReservedNamespace 
   public
|  private
ParenExpression  ( AssignmentExpressionallowIn )
ParenListExpression 
   ParenExpression
|  ( ListExpressionallowIn , AssignmentExpressionallowIn )

public evaluates to the public namespace. private can be used only inside a class and evaluates to that class’s private namespace.

this may only be used in methods, constructors, or functions with the prototype attribute set.

Function Expressions

FunctionExpression 
   function FunctionCommon
|  function Identifier FunctionCommon

A FunctionExpression creates and returns an anonymous function.

Object Literals

ObjectLiteral  { FieldList }
FieldList 
   «empty»
|  NonemptyFieldList
NonemptyFieldList 
   LiteralField
|  LiteralField , NonemptyFieldList
LiteralField  FieldName : AssignmentExpressionallowIn
FieldName 
   QualifiedIdentifier
|  String
|  Number
|  ParenExpression
The ParenExpression is evaluated at run time and its result coerced to a qualified name.

Array Literals

ArrayLiteral  [ ElementList ]
ElementList 
   «empty»
|  LiteralElement
|  , ElementList
|  LiteralElement , ElementList
LiteralElement  AssignmentExpressionallowIn

Super Expressions

SuperExpression 
   super
|  super ParenExpression

super, which may only be used inside a class C, can be applied to a subexpression that evaluates to an instance v of C. That subexpression can be either a ParenExpression or omitted, in which case it defaults to this.

As specified in the grammar below, the SuperExpression must be embedded as the left operand of a . (property lookup) or [] (indexing) operator. super changes the behavior of the operator in which it is embedded by limiting its property search to definitions inherited from class C’s superclass. See property lookup.

Postfix Expressions

PostfixExpression 
   AttributeExpression
|  FullPostfixExpression
|  ShortNewExpression
AttributeExpression 
   SimpleQualifiedIdentifier
|  AttributeExpression PropertyOperator
|  AttributeExpression Arguments
FullPostfixExpression 
   PrimaryExpression
|  ExpressionQualifiedIdentifier
|  FullNewExpression
|  FullPostfixExpression PropertyOperator
|  SuperExpression PropertyOperator
|  FullPostfixExpression Arguments
|  PostfixExpression [no line break] ++
|  PostfixExpression [no line break] --
FullNewExpression  new FullNewSubexpression Arguments
FullNewSubexpression 
   PrimaryExpression
|  QualifiedIdentifier
|  FullNewExpression
|  FullNewSubexpression PropertyOperator
|  SuperExpression PropertyOperator
ShortNewExpression  new ShortNewSubexpression
ShortNewSubexpression 
   FullNewSubexpression
|  ShortNewExpression

A SimpleQualifiedIdentifier or ExpressionQualifiedIdentifier expression id resolves to the binding of id in the innermost enclosing scope that has a visible binding of id. If a qualifier q is present before the id, then the QualifiedIdentifier expression resolves to the binding of id in the innermost enclosing scope that has a visible binding of id in the namespace q.

Property Operators

PropertyOperator 
   . QualifiedIdentifier
|  Brackets
Brackets 
   [ ]
|  [ ListExpressionallowIn ]
|  [ ExpressionsWithRest ]
Arguments 
   ( )
|  ParenListExpression
|  ( ExpressionsWithRest )
ExpressionsWithRest 
   RestExpression
|  ListExpressionallowIn , RestExpression
RestExpression  ... AssignmentExpressionallowIn

The . operator accepts a QualifiedIdentifier as the second operand and performs a property lookup.

The grammar allows the [] operator to take multiple arguments. However, all built-in objects take at most one argument. Implementation-defined host objects may take more arguments.

For most objects other than arrays and some host objects, the expression o[m] explicitly coerces m to a qualified name q and returns the result of o.q. See property lookup.

An argument list may contain a final argument preceded by .... That argument must be an Array and cannot be null. The elements of that array become additional arguments to the function, following the arguments preceding the ..., if any; the array itself is not passed as an argument. The array must not contain holes.

Unary Operators

UnaryExpression 
   PostfixExpression
|  delete PostfixExpression
|  void UnaryExpression
|  typeof UnaryExpression
|  ++ PostfixExpression
|  -- PostfixExpression
|  + UnaryExpression
|  - UnaryExpression
|  - NegatedMinLong
|  ~ UnaryExpression
|  ! UnaryExpression

The typeof operator returns a string as in JavaScript 1.5. There is no way to query the most specific class of an object — all one can ask is whether an object is a member of a specific class.

Multiplicative Operators

MultiplicativeExpression 
   UnaryExpression
|  MultiplicativeExpression * UnaryExpression
|  MultiplicativeExpression / UnaryExpression
|  MultiplicativeExpression % UnaryExpression

Additive Operators

AdditiveExpression 
   MultiplicativeExpression
|  AdditiveExpression + MultiplicativeExpression
|  AdditiveExpression - MultiplicativeExpression

Bitwise Shift Operators

ShiftExpression 
   AdditiveExpression
|  ShiftExpression << AdditiveExpression
|  ShiftExpression >> AdditiveExpression
|  ShiftExpression >>> AdditiveExpression

Relational Operators

RelationalExpressionallowIn 
   ShiftExpression
|  RelationalExpressionallowIn < ShiftExpression
|  RelationalExpressionallowIn > ShiftExpression
|  RelationalExpressionallowIn <= ShiftExpression
|  RelationalExpressionallowIn >= ShiftExpression
|  RelationalExpressionallowIn is ShiftExpression
|  RelationalExpressionallowIn as ShiftExpression
|  RelationalExpressionallowIn in ShiftExpression
|  RelationalExpressionallowIn instanceof ShiftExpression
RelationalExpressionnoIn 
   ShiftExpression
|  RelationalExpressionnoIn < ShiftExpression
|  RelationalExpressionnoIn > ShiftExpression
|  RelationalExpressionnoIn <= ShiftExpression
|  RelationalExpressionnoIn >= ShiftExpression
|  RelationalExpressionnoIn is ShiftExpression
|  RelationalExpressionnoIn as ShiftExpression
|  RelationalExpressionnoIn instanceof ShiftExpression

The expression a is b takes an expression that must evaluate to a type as its second operand b. When a is not null, the expression a is b returns true if a is a member of type b and false otherwise; this is equivalent to testing whether a can be stored in a variable of type b without coercion. When a is null, a is b behaves analogously to method dispatch and returns true if b is either Object or Null and false otherwise. As a special case, when a is –0.0 and b is sbyte, byte, short, ushort, int, or uint, a is b returns true.

The expression a as b returns a if a is a member of type b. Otherwise, if a can be implicitly coerced to type b, then the result is the result of that implicit coercion. Otherwise, a as b returns null if null is a member of type b or throws an exception otherwise. In any case b must evaluate to a type.

The instanceof operator behaves in the same way as in JavaScript 1.5 — a instanceof b follows a’s prototype chain.

Equality Operators

EqualityExpression 
   RelationalExpression
|  EqualityExpression == RelationalExpression
|  EqualityExpression != RelationalExpression
|  EqualityExpression === RelationalExpression
|  EqualityExpression !== RelationalExpression

Binary Bitwise Operators

BitwiseAndExpression 
   EqualityExpression
|  BitwiseAndExpression & EqualityExpression
BitwiseXorExpression 
   BitwiseAndExpression
|  BitwiseXorExpression ^ BitwiseAndExpression
BitwiseOrExpression 
   BitwiseXorExpression
|  BitwiseOrExpression | BitwiseXorExpression

Binary Logical Operators

LogicalAndExpression 
   BitwiseOrExpression
|  LogicalAndExpression && BitwiseOrExpression
LogicalXorExpression 
   LogicalAndExpression
|  LogicalXorExpression ^^ LogicalAndExpression

The ^^ operator is a logical exclusive-or operator. It evaluates both operands. If they both convert to true or both convert to false, then ^^ returns false; otherwise ^^ returns the unconverted value of whichever argument converted to true.

LogicalOrExpression 
   LogicalXorExpression
|  LogicalOrExpression || LogicalXorExpression

Conditional Operator

ConditionalExpression 
   LogicalOrExpression
|  LogicalOrExpression ? AssignmentExpression : AssignmentExpression
NonAssignmentExpression 
   LogicalOrExpression
|  LogicalOrExpression ? NonAssignmentExpression : NonAssignmentExpression

Assignment Operators

AssignmentExpression 
   ConditionalExpression
|  PostfixExpression = AssignmentExpression
|  PostfixExpression CompoundAssignment AssignmentExpression
|  PostfixExpression LogicalAssignment AssignmentExpression
CompoundAssignment 
   *=
|  /=
|  %=
|  +=
|  -=
|  <<=
|  >>=
|  >>>=
|  &=
|  ^=
|  |=
LogicalAssignment 
   &&=
|  ^^=
|  ||=

Comma Expressions

ListExpression 
   AssignmentExpression
|  ListExpression , AssignmentExpression

Type Expressions

TypeExpression  NonAssignmentExpression

Compile-Time Constant Expressions

A compile-time constant expression is an expression that either produces an error or evaluates to a value that can be determined at compile time.

The reason that a compile-time constant expression is not guaranteed to always evaluate successfully at run time is that global name lookup cannot be guaranteed to succeed. It is possible for a program to import a package P that defines a global constant P::A that can be accessed as A and then dynamically define another top-level variable Q::A that collides with A. It does not appear to be practical to restrict compile-time constant expressions to only qualified names to eliminate the possibility of such collisions.

A compile-time expression can consist of the following:

A pure function cannot have any read or write side effects or create any objects. A pure function’s result depends only on its arguments. A JavaScript host embedding may define some pure functions. Currently there is no way for a script to define any such functions, but a future language extension may permit that.

A reference R to a definition D of a compile-time constant is allowed inside a compile-time constant expression as long as the conditions below are met. If D was imported from another package, then the location of D is considered to be the location of the import directive. If D is visible to R by virtue of an intervening use directive U, then the conditions below have to be satisfied both with respect to D and R and with respect to U and R.

Some compile-time constant expressions only allow references to definitions that are textually prior to the point of the reference. Other compile-time constant expressions allow forward references to later compile-time constant definitions.

Restrictions

JavaScript 2.0 imposes the following restrictions:

A statement A dominates statement B if any of the following conditions are met:

Note that the above definition is conservative. If statement A dominates statement B, then it is guaranteed that, if B is executed then A must have been executed earlier; however, there may be some other statements A' that also are guaranteed to have been executed before B but which do not dominate B by the above definition.

A statement A is dead if any of the following conditions are met:

Note that the above definition is conservative. If a statement is dead, then it is guaranteed that it cannot be executed; however, there may be statements that cannot be executed that are not dead by the above definition.

A statement is live if it is not dead.


Waldemar Horwat
Last modified Monday, June 30, 2003
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