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@cowboy
Created July 7, 2010 01:51
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for paul
// Console arguments testing
var apc = [].slice;
(function(){
console.log( apc.call(arguments) );
})( "false", 1, undefined, null, ["foo","bar","baz"], {a:1,b:2}, false );
(function(){
console.log.call( console, apc.call(arguments) );
})( "false", 1, undefined, null, ["foo","bar","baz"], {a:1,b:2}, false );
(function(){
console.log.apply( console, apc.call(arguments) );
})( "false", 1, undefined, null, ["foo","bar","baz"], {a:1,b:2}, false );
console.log( "false", 1, undefined, null, ["foo","bar","baz"], {a:1,b:2}, false );
@cowboy
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cowboy commented Jul 7, 2010

Chrome 5 inspector output:

chrome 5 inspector

Note that by default (the bottom two), since strings don't have " around them, "false" and false appear to be the same. This is why I coded JavaScript Debug to not apply arguments in WebKit (the top two).

@paulirish
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IE doesnt handle console.log.apply/call at all, so my these have the middle two examples removed..

IE8 dev tools:

IE9 dev tools:

@paulirish
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Firefox 3.5.10 with firebug 1.6X:

@cowboy
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cowboy commented Jul 7, 2010

At least Firebug colors booleans and strings differently in the "plain ol' arguments" logging mode, but it's still too subtle!

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