Question

I find myself always writing:

console.log(window.location.href);

without even thinking about it. The majority of answers on SO also write it this way. Is there any reason why I can't just write:

location.href

since location is an object at window level? Are there any cross-browser compatibility issues with this?

To Clarify: I know there is document.location - that is NOT what this question is about. This is about if there is any difference with using only location vs using window.location across browsers.

Was it helpful?

Solution

There are some differences.

In global scope, there is absolutely no difference between them, but in other cases you might get in trouble:

function () {
  var location = { 'href' : '123' } ;
  console.log(window.location.href) // actual url
  console.log(location.href) // '123'
}

This stems from the fact that if you write location without prefixing it with window, it will go up through every scope to find a variable named location. Eventually it will find it in window, unless another scope declared one as well. Obviously the reverse is true as well:

function () {
  var window = { 'location' : { 'href': '123' } };  
  console.log(window.location.href) // '123'
  console.log(location.href) // actual url
}

I for one prefer to prefix the global variables with window because that way i immediately know they are global and also because when i find a global variable that is not prefixed with window, i know it is a typo missing a var, but that is purely personal preference.

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