I'm experiencing an odd behavior (maybe it isn't odd at all but just me not understanding why) with an javascript array containing some objects.
Since I'm no javascript pro, there might very well be clear explanation as to why this is happening, I just don't know it.
I have javascript that is running in a document. It makes an array of objects similar to this:
var myArray = [{"Id":"guid1","Name":"name1"},{"Id":"guid2","Name":"name2"},...];
If I print out this array at the place it was created like JSON.stringify(myArray), I get what I was expecting:
[{"Id":"guid1","Name":"name1"},{"Id":"guid2","Name":"name2"},...]
However, if I try to access this array from a child document to this document (a document in a window opened by the first document) the array isn't an array any more. So doing JSON.stringify(parent.opener.myArray) in the child document will result in the following:
{"0":{"Id":"guid1","Name":"name1"},"1":{"Id":"guid2","Name":"name2"},...}
And this was not what I was expecting - I was expecting to get the same as I did in teh parent document.
Can anyone explain to me why this is happening and how to fix it so that the array is still an array when addressed from a child window/document?
PS. the objects aren't added to the array as stated above, they are added like this:
function objTemp()
{
this.Id = '';
this.Name = '';
};
var myArray = [];
var obj = new ObjTemp();
obj.Id = 'guid1';
obj.Name = 'name1';
myArray[myArray.length] = obj;
If that makes any difference.
Any help would be much appreciated, both for fixing my problem but also for better understanding what is going on :)
Object.prototype.toString.apply(value) === '[object Array]'work? Then you could use a JSON lib that uses this method.