Look at the comments. You will see that for CSS properties, the key notation is not compatible with a number of properties. Using the camel case key notation therefore is the current way:
obj.style-attr // would become
obj["styleAttr"]
Use key notation rather than dot
style["text-align"]
All arrays in JavaScript are objects and all objects are just associative arrays. This means you can refer to a place in an object just as you would refer to a key in an array.
arr[0]
or the object
obj["method"] == obj.method
A couple things to remember when accessing properties this way:
they are evaluated so use strings unless you are doing something with a counter or using dynamic method names.
This means obj[method] would give you an undefined error while obj["method"] would not
You must use this notation if you are using characters that are not allowed in JavaScript variables.
This regex pretty much sums it up:
[a-zA-Z_$][0-9a-zA-Z_$]*
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…