When you run:
window.toString.call(\"\")
everything\'s fine in FF/CH but in IE8 you get a script error. Investigating a bit more it turned
window
is a host object, and the ECMAScript Language Specification (3rd edition) does not require host objects to be derived from the native Object
object. In IE (and probably in some other browsers) host objects aren't, so they don't support any of the native methods or properties (although they may have methods or properties with the same names as native methods or properties which are accessible to scripts).
If all you want is to get hold of the language implementation's default native toString
method then you should use Object.prototype.toString.call("")
.
NickFitz is correct, the toString method on the host object that you are finding is purely so that if you did
alert(window);
you would get the text [object]
All that the javascript method toString() used in your examples would acheive is to make a string from a string so the correct way to do what you are trying is;
var a =new String ("");
or simply
var b = "";
or if you really want to be silly;
var b = "".toString();