I’m new to JavaScript and a little bit confused with the duck typing concept. As far as I can tell, I understood the concept. But that leads to a strange consequence in my thoughts. I will explain with the following example:
I’m currently working on a mobile web app with jQuery Mobile. At one point I capture the vmousedown event for a canvas. I’m interested in the pressure of the touch. I found the Touch.webkitForce property.
$('#canvas').live('vmousedown', function(e){
console.log(e.originalEvent.originalEvent.touches[0].webkitForce);
}
This works fine when using the Remote Debugging for Chrome. But throws an exception when testing in Opera Firefly, because the originalEvent property is no touch event, but a click event.
So every time I access a property of an object which is not under my authority, do I have to check existence and type?
if( e.originalEvent &&
e.originalEvent.originalEvent &&
e.originalEvent.originalEvent.touches &&
e.originalEvent.originalEvent.touches[0] &&
e.originalEvent.originalEvent.touches[0].webkitForce) {
console.log(e.originalEvent.originalEvent.touches[0].webkitForce);
}
Can please someone clarify that for me?
Yes you will have to check the whole path, once at a time, or you can automate it:
Test case: