Why do we still have to use quoted string literal to switch on strict in JS? Surely something a little more strongly 'typed' could be used here, like calling a built in function, say, Object.UseStrict()or something like that. What is the reason behind having to resort to a string literal?
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        ProfK
        
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                    9It's succinct and won't cause errors on browsers that don't support it. – Waxen Dec 12 '14 at 17:21
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                    1I didn't think it a duplicate of "What does 'use strict' do" because I know what it does. I was asking specifically about its 'syntax'. – ProfK Dec 12 '14 at 17:26
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            Compatibility across all browsers and JS runtime engines.
E.g., http://ejohn.org/blog/ecmascript-5-strict-mode-json-and-more/
No new syntax is introduced in order to enable strict mode. This is huge. This means that you can turn strict mode on in your scripts – today – and it’ll have, at worst, no side effect in old browsers.
 
    
    
        Dave Newton
        
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