Looks like it. I see this in missing.js:
/** * @export * This gets mapped to org.apache.flex.utils.Language.trace() by the compiler * @param {...} rest */ function trace(rest) {} /** * @type {!Console} * @const */ var console; I guess I can add another one like so: /** * @type {!Process} * @const */ var process; However, it seems like a drag to have to add a typedef every time a developer needs to check for the existence of a global that we did not think of. > On Jul 4, 2017, at 9:13 PM, Harbs <harbs.li...@gmail.com> wrote: > > Thanks. Here’s what I see: > > if(typeof window !== "undefined") > { > theConsole = window.console; > } > else if(typeof console !== "undefined") > { > theConsole = console; > } > > Did you define console in a typedef maybe? > > I’m thinking that Falcon should really allow undefined variables when used > with “typeof”. > > Truth be told, I really need to do something like one of these: > if(typeof (process) != 'undefined' && {}.toString.call(process) == '[object > process]’) > or: > if(typeof process != 'undefined' && process && process.constructor.name == > "process”) > > Of course every reference to process causes a compiler error. I wonder if > there’s some way to tell the compiler to accept it without complaining… > >> On Jul 4, 2017, at 8:54 PM, Josh Tynjala <joshtynj...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> I don't remember exactly what I did, but in order to get trace() working in >> Node.js, I had to figure out how to find the console object on window >> versus global. I feel like I remember using typeof, but maybe it was >> something else. Take a look at the implementation of Language.trace() to >> see what I did. >> >> - Josh >> >> On Jul 4, 2017 5:26 AM, "Harbs" <harbs.li...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >>> I’m trying to figure out how to solve this dilemma: >>> >>> Browsers attach global variables to window. >>> >>> Node.js attaches globals to global. >>> >>> I’m trying to check for the existence of a global called process. In JS, >>> you’d generally do that by checking typeof process == ‘undefined’. Falcon >>> does not allow you to do that and complains that process is an undefined >>> property. In the browser you can use window[“process”] == undefined and in >>> node you can (theoretically) use global[“process”] == undefined. I can’t >>> think of a generic way to do this though. >>> >>> Thoughts? >>> Harbs >