arguments.callee
Deprecated: This feature is no longer recommended. Though some browsers might still support it, it may have already been removed from the relevant web standards, may be in the process of being dropped, or may only be kept for compatibility purposes. Avoid using it, and update existing code if possible; see the compatibility table at the bottom of this page to guide your decision. Be aware that this feature may cease to work at any time.
Note: Accessing arguments.callee
in strict mode will throw a TypeError
. If a function must reference itself, either give the function expression a name or use a function declaration.
The arguments.callee
property contains the currently executing function that the arguments belong to.
Value
A reference to the currently executing function.
Property attributes of arguments.callee |
|
---|---|
Writable | yes |
Enumerable | no |
Configurable | yes |
Note: callee
is a data property only in non-strict functions with simple parameters (in which case the arguments
object is also auto-syncing). Otherwise, it is an accessor property whose getter and setter both throw a TypeError
.
Description
callee
is a property of the arguments
object. It can be used to refer to the currently executing function inside the function body of that function. This is useful when the name of the function is unknown, such as within a function expression with no name (also called "anonymous functions").
(The text below is largely adapted from a Stack Overflow answer by olliej)
Early versions of JavaScript did not allow named function expressions, and for this reason you could not make a recursive function expression.
For example, this syntax worked:
js
function factorial(n) {
return n <= 1 ? 1 : factorial(n - 1) * n;
}
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5].map(factorial);
but:
js
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5].map(function (n) {
return n <= 1 ? 1 : /* what goes here? */ (n - 1) * n;
});
did not. To get around this arguments.callee
was added so you could do
js
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5].map(function (n) {
return n <= 1 ? 1 : arguments.callee(n - 1) * n;
});
However, the design of arguments.callee
has multiple issues. The first problem is that the recursive call will get a different this
value. For example:
js
const global = this;
const sillyFunction = function (recursed) {
if (this !== global) {
console.log("This is:", this);
} else {
console.log("This is the global");
}
if (!recursed) {
return arguments.callee(true);
}
};
sillyFunction();
// This is the global
// This is: [object Arguments]
In addition, references to arguments.callee
make inlining and tail recursion impossible in the general case. (You can achieve it in select cases through tracing, etc., but even the best code is suboptimal due to checks that would not otherwise be necessary.)
ECMAScript 3 resolved these issues by allowing named function expressions. For example:
js
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5].map(function factorial(n) {
return n <= 1 ? 1 : factorial(n - 1) * n;
});
This has numerous benefits:
- the function can be called like any other from inside your code
- it does not create a variable in the outer scope (except for IE 8 and below)
- it has better performance than accessing the arguments object
Strict mode has banned other properties that leak stack information, like the caller
property of functions. This is because looking at the call stack has one single major effect: it makes a large number of optimizations impossible, or much more difficult. For example, if you cannot guarantee that a function f
will not call an unknown function, it is not possible to inline f
.
js
function f(a, b, c, d, e) {
return a ? b * c : d * e;
}
If the JavaScript interpreter cannot guarantee that all the provided arguments are numbers at the point that the call is made, it needs to either insert checks for all the arguments before the inlined code, or it cannot inline the function. This means any call site that may have been trivially inlinable accumulates a large number of guards. Now in this particular case a smart interpreter should be able to rearrange the checks to be more optimal and not check any values that would not be used. However in many cases that's just not possible and therefore it becomes impossible to inline.
Examples
Using arguments.callee in an anonymous recursive function
A recursive function must be able to refer to itself. Typically, a function refers to itself by its name. However, an anonymous function (which can be created by a function expression or the Function
constructor) does not have a name. Therefore if there is no accessible variable referring to it, the only way the function can refer to itself is by arguments.callee
.
The following example defines a function, which, in turn, defines and returns a factorial function. This example isn't very practical, and there are nearly no cases where the same result cannot be achieved with named function expressions.
js
function create() {
return function (n) {
if (n <= 1) {
return 1;
}
return n * arguments.callee(n - 1);
};
}
const result = create()(5); // returns 120 (5 * 4 * 3 * 2 * 1)
Recursion of anonymous functions with a Y-combinator
Although function expressions can now be named, arrow functions always remain anonymous, which means they cannot reference themselves without being assigned to a variable first. Fortunately, in Lambda calculus there's a very good solution which allows a function to both be anonymous and self-referential. The technique is called a Y-combinator. Here we will not explain how it works, only that it works.
js
// The Y-combinator: a utility function!
const Y = (hof) => ((x) => x(x))((x) => hof((y) => x(x)(y)));
console.log(
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5].map(
// Wrap the higher-order function in the Y-combinator
// "factorial" is not a function's name: it's introduced as a parameter
Y((factorial) => (n) => (n <= 1 ? 1 : factorial(n - 1) * n)),
),
);
// [ 1, 2, 6, 24, 120 ]
Note: This method allocates a new closure for every iteration, which may significantly increase memory usage. It's only here to demonstrate the possibility, but should be avoided in production. Use a temporary variable or a named function expression instead.
Specifications
Specification |
---|
ECMAScript Language Specification # sec-arguments-exotic-objects |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser