The second part of an answer I gave recently answers this question too. I don't consider this a duplicate of that one so, for convenience, I'll paste it here:
The console object is not part of any standard and is an extension to the Document Object Model. Like other DOM objects, it is considered a host object and is not required to inherit from Object, nor its methods from Function, like native ECMAScript functions and objects do. This is the reason apply and call are undefined on those methods. In IE 9, most DOM objects were improved to inherit from native ECMAScript types. As the developer tools are considered an extension to IE (albeit, a built-in extension), they clearly didn't receive the same improvements as the rest of the DOM.
For what it's worth, you can still use some Function.prototype methods on console methods with a little bind() magic:
var log = Function.prototype.bind.call(console.log, console);
log.apply(console, ["this", "is", "a", "test"]);
//-> "thisisatest"
So you could fix up all the console
methods for IE 9 in the same manner:
if (Function.prototype.bind && window.console && typeof console.log == "object"){
[
"log","info","warn","error","assert","dir","clear","profile","profileEnd"
].forEach(function (method) {
console[method] = this.bind(console[method], console);
}, Function.prototype.call);
}
This replaces the "host" functions with native functions that call the "host" functions. You can get it working in Internet Explorer 8 by including the compatibility implementations for Function.prototype.bind
and Array.prototype.forEach
in your code, or rewriting the above snippet to incorporate the techniques used by those methods.
See also
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