Since hasOwnProperty has some caveats and quirks (window / extensive use in Internet Explorer 8 issues, etc.):
Is there any reason to even use it? If simply testing if a property is undefined, is it better justified and more simplistic?
For example:
var obj = { a : 'here' };
if (obj.hasOwnProperty('a')) { /* do something */ }
if (obj.a !== undefined) { /* do something */ }
// Or maybe (typeof (obj.a) !== 'undefined')
I'd prefer to be using the most cross-browser friendly, and up to date methodology.
I've also seen this prototype overwritten for hasOwnProperty, which works, but I'm not sold on its usefulness...
if (!Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty) {
Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty = function(prop) {
var proto = this.__proto__ || this.constructor.prototype;
return (prop in this) && (!(prop in proto) || proto[prop] !== this[prop]);
};
}
As further information to the answer given by Pavel Gruba, and the polyfil that you supplied:
To the best of my knowledge, there is no good way to polyfil hasOwnProperty
for browsers that do not support it natively. I have seen quite a few different ones in the wild and they all produce false positives or negatives. If I have absolutely no alternative then this is what I created for my use, but it also suffers false positives and negatives. According to MSDN.
Supported in the following document modes: Quirks, Internet Explorer 6 standards, Internet Explorer 7 standards, Internet Explorer 8 standards, Internet Explorer 9 standards, Internet Explorer 10 standards. Also supported in Windows Store apps.
function is(x, y) {
if (x === y) {
if (x === 0) {
return 1 / x === 1 / y;
}
return true;
}
var x1 = x,
y1 = y;
return x !== x1 && y !== y1;
}
function hasOwnProperty(object, property) {
var prototype;
return property in object && (!(property in (prototype = object.__proto__ || object.constructor.prototype)) || !is(object[property], prototype[property]));
}
function NewClass() {}
NewClass.prototype = {
a: 'there'
};
var obj = new NewClass();
if (obj.hasOwnProperty("a")) {
console.log("has property")
}
if (hasOwnProperty(obj, "a")) {
console.log("has property")
}