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304 lines
7.0 KiB
304 lines
7.0 KiB
/*
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* A bit messy direct eval tests.
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*/
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var global = this;
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var orig_eval = eval;
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/*===
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false
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"this" value
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10
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20
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false
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"this" value
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20
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20
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5
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===*/
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/* Direct eval call needs to (1) be referenced with the name 'eval',
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* and (2) bind to the original eval() function.
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*
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* It does NOT need to be bound through the original environment
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* record, i.e. the global object. A local variable with the name
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* 'eval' and which points to the built-in eval function is OK.
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*/
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var x = 5;
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function f1() {
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var x = 10;
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// direct eval, non-strict eval code ->
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// * this binding maintained
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// * lexical/variable environment maintained
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print(eval("this === global"));
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print("" + eval("this"));
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print(eval("x")); // binds to f1()'s var 'x'
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eval("var x = 20"); // modifies f1()'s var 'x'
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print(x);
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// direct eval, strict eval code ->
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// * this binding maintained
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// * lexical/variable environment is a fresh one
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print(eval("'use strict'; this === global"));
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print("" + eval("'use strict'; this"));
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print(eval("'use strict'; x")); // "bleeds out", matches f1()'x var 'x'
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eval("'use strict'; var x = 30;"); // own env, no change to our 'x'
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print(x);
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}
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try {
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f1.call('"this" value');
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print(x);
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} catch (e) {
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print(e.name);
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}
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/*===
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true
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Infinity
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5
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50
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20
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true
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Infinity
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15
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50
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20
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15
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20
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===*/
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function f2() {
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var x = 50;
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var indirect_eval = eval;
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// indirect_eval("x") and indirect_eval("var x = 15") fails
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// in V8 for some reason
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// indirect eval call, non-strict eval code ->
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// * this binding is global object
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// * lexical/variable environment is the global object
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print(indirect_eval("this === global"));
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print(indirect_eval("this.Number.POSITIVE_INFINITY"));
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print(indirect_eval("x")); // binds to global 'x'
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indirect_eval("var x = 15"); // to global object
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indirect_eval("var y = 20"); // to global object
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print(x); // our 'x'
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print(y); // still prints, bleeds to global object
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// indirect eval call, strict eval code
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// * this binding is global object
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// * lexical/variable environment is a fresh one
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print(indirect_eval("'use strict'; this === global"));
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print(indirect_eval("'use strict'; this.Number.POSITIVE_INFINITY"));
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print(indirect_eval("'use strict'; x")); // bleeds out, binds to global 'x'
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indirect_eval("'use strict'; var x = 100"); // own copy
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indirect_eval("'use strict'; var y = 200"); // own copy
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print(x); // our 'x'
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print(y); // still prints, bleeds to global object
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}
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try {
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f2.call('"this" value');
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print(x);
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print(y);
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} catch (e) {
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print(e.name);
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}
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/*===
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"this" value
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===*/
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/* Direct eval call through a local variable of name 'eval'.
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* Note that we can't simply say 'var eval = eval' because
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* that would ALWAYS assign undefined to 'eval' (variable
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* declarations happen before any right-hand-sides are
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* evaluated).
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*/
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function f3() {
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var eval = orig_eval;
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// this is a direct eval -> this binding should remain
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print("" + eval('this'));
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}
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try {
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f3.call('"this" value');
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} catch (e) {
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print(e.name);
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}
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/*===
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false
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fake eval
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true
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false
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===*/
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/* An illustration that a certain eval() call may change from a direct eval
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* to an indirect one dynamically. There are other ways to get the same
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* effect.
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*
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* The impact is that whenever a variable named 'eval' is encountered by
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* the compiler, it must always generate slow path code for it. In
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* particular, CSVAR must be used for call setup (not CSREG).
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*/
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var binding_obj = {};
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function wrapper() {
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var ret;
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with (binding_obj) {
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ret = function() {
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// direct eval --> this_binding is caller's "this binding" --> prints false
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// indirect eval --> this_binding is global object --> prints true
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print(eval('this === global'));
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}
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}
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return ret;
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}
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try {
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var func = wrapper();
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var my_obj = { func: func }; // call through this to get a this binding != global object
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// initially, binding_obj has no 'eval' binding, hence direct eval
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my_obj.func();
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// add 'intercepting' eval binding, hence indirect eval
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binding_obj.eval = function(x) { print('fake eval'); return orig_eval(x); };
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my_obj.func();
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// remove intercepting binding, again a direct eval
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delete binding_obj.eval;
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my_obj.func();
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} catch (e) {
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print(e.name);
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}
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/*===
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forced this
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Infinity
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Infinity
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===*/
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/* Is it a direct eval call if an "eval()" target is a bound function
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* whose target function is the built-in eval?
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*
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* The answer in the spec is no: the result of GetValue() for "eval"
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* must be the built-in eval function for the call to be considered
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* direct.
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*
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* Check that we follow these semantics.
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*/
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var bound_eval = eval.bind('bound this'); // bind 'this' to 'bound this'
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var indirect_eval = eval;
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function bound1() {
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// direct eval, this should bound to 'forced this'
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print("" + eval("this"));
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}
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function bound2() {
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// indirect eval through a bound function, this should be
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// bound to the global object
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print(bound_eval("this.Number.POSITIVE_INFINITY"));
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}
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function bound3() {
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// indirect eval through a bound function, but eval code is
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// strict; this should still be bound to the global object
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print(bound_eval("'use strict'; this.Number.POSITIVE_INFINITY"));
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}
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try {
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/* The 'this' binding for eval() itself (here, the string "bound this")
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* should not really matter; the 'this' binding for the evaluated code
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* should still be as specified in E5 Section 10.4.2.
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*
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* The initial [[Call]] would happen using semantics from E5 Section
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* 15.3.4.5.1. That algorithm would [[Call]] the built-in eval
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* function (E5 Section 10.4.2) which would ignore any 'this' binding.
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*/
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bound1.call('forced this');
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} catch (e) {
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print(e.name);
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}
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try {
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bound2.call('forced this');
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} catch (e) {
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print(e.name);
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}
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try {
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bound3.call('forced this');
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} catch (e) {
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print(e.name);
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}
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/*===
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NaN
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NaN
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bar
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bar
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===*/
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/* The "this binding" for a direct eval is always the caller's current this
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* binding; this is the case for both strict and non-strict eval code.
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*
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* For an indirect eval, "this binding" is set to the global object.
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*/
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function thisBinding_indirect_nonstrict() {
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var my_eval = eval;
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my_eval('print(this.NaN)');
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}
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function thisBinding_indirect_strict() {
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var my_eval = eval;
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my_eval('"use strict"; print(this.NaN)');
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}
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function thisBinding_direct_nonstrict() {
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eval('print(this.foo)');
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}
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function thisBinding_direct_strict() {
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eval('"use strict"; print(this.foo)');
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}
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try {
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thisBinding_indirect_nonstrict.call({foo:'bar'});
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} catch (e) {
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print(e.name);
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}
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try {
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thisBinding_indirect_strict.call({foo:'bar'});
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} catch (e) {
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print(e.name);
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}
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try {
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thisBinding_direct_nonstrict.call({foo:'bar'});
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} catch (e) {
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print(e.name);
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}
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try {
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thisBinding_direct_strict.call({foo:'bar'});
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} catch (e) {
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print(e.name);
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}
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