Using the Chrome Console, this is my input and output:
[0].map(Array); [[0, 0, [0]]]; // output What is happening here?
EDIT
The reason this makes me curious is because something like
[0].map(String); Will return
["0"]; And not
["0", "0", "String"]
Definition and Usage. map() creates a new array from calling a function for every array element. map() calls a function once for each element in an array. map() does not execute the function for empty elements. map() does not change the original array.
map() function returns a map object(which is an iterator) of the results after applying the given function to each item of a given iterable (list, tuple etc.) Parameters : fun : It is a function to which map passes each element of given iterable.
The map() method creates a new array populated with the results of calling a provided function on every element in the calling array.
ES6 - Array Method map() map() method creates a new array with the results of calling a provided function on every element in this array.
The .map() function is calling the Array() function with three arguments, the value of the array element which is 0, the index of that element, also 0, and a reference to the whole array.
So it's like doing this:
var a = [0]; var index = 0 Array(a[index], index, a); // create array with three elements The array returned by Array() then becomes the first element of the array that .map() creates, hence the extra level of nesting in your [[0, 0, [0]]] result.
EDIT regarding your edit: when you say [0].map(String); that results in String() being called with the same three arguments like String(a[index], index, a), but the String() function ignores all but the first argument, whereas Array() uses all supplied arguments.
Firstly, Array could be used as a function to create arrays:
var arr = Array(1, 2, "Hello"); console.log(arr); // [1, 2, "Hello"] Secondly, map passes three parameters to its callback: the element, its index from the array and the array itself.
So, since your array contains one element, the line:
[0].map(Array); is equivalent to:
[Array(0, 0, [0])]; // the element 0 in the original array will be mapped into Array(0, 0, [0])
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