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event handling - Reserved function names in JavaScript

After renaming my function the code stopped working. That new name scrollIntoView seems to be clashing with the element.scrollIntoView() method.

<div onmousedown="scrollIntoView('id001')"/>

function scrollIntoView(id) {
    alert(id);
}

I've created a simple test case https://jsfiddle.net/mgtn215y/ which has shown my function is simply ignored in favor of element.scrollIntoView() even

  • it is not called on element
  • attributes do not match

The solution is obvious - to use a different function name. As this behavior is consistent across major browsers, I expect this is specified somewhere. However, I couldn't find anything related in e.g. JavaScript lexical grammar. Is there any background for this behavior?

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The issue is the scope chain of functions compiled from HTML element attribute values declared in HTML source. Attributes of the form on_eventName=functionBodyCode exhibit this behavior.

For historical reasons (the DOM did not exist in its current form, document.getElementByID had yet to be invented...) such functions are compiled with a scope chain comprising the object on which the event handler attribute is provided, any form element the element is within, and the document object. However different browsers took different approaches when emulating Netscape behavior. Some browsers included any and every parent object of an element providing an event handler attribute, while others omitted some pertinent objects such as document.

Technical detail may be found in "Javascript the definitive guide" O'Reilly, section "19.1.6. Scope of Event Handlers".

The main recommendation is to avoid supplying event handlers in HTML - add them in JavaScript using addEventListener instead. If for some reason function calls must be coded in HTML attribute values, avoid using function names that are methods of DOM objects.

Note the custom scope chain for event handlers only applies to functions generated from HTML attributes. It does not apply to functions created in JavaScript and added to an element using addEventListener or element.onEventName=aFunctionObject.


The following snippet demonstrates locating property names of outer elements in the scope chain of event handlers defined in HTML: :

<form name="formName1" action="">
<p> Try to access the elements collection of the form:
   <button type="button"
      onclick="console.log( elements);">elements
   </button>
</p>

</form>
<form name="formName2" action="" onsubmit="return false">
<p> Try to access form name as form.name:
  <button type="button"
     onclick="console.log( 'form.name: %s', form.name);">form.name
  </button>
</p>
</form>

<form name="formName3" action="" onsubmit="return false">
<p>Access document.write as "write"
   <button type="button"
      onclick="console.log( 'write: %s', write);">write
   </button>
</p>
</form>

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