JavaScript array creation, usage, and compatibility techniques can
      be confusing. Here are the main points of this chapter in review:
    
- 	  Arrays and objects are the same thing in JavaScript. Any
	  object can have array elements, and any array can have
	  object properties.
	
 
-  
	  In Navigator 3.0, there are three methods that can be used to
	  manipulate arrays:
          
 
- You can can convert an array, and all of
              its elements into a single string with the
	      Array.join() method.
            
 
- You can reverse the
	      order of elements in an array with the
	      Array.reverse() method.
            
 
- You can sort
	      the elements of an array with the
	      Array.sort() method.
            
 
 
 
-           In Navigator 3.0 and Internet Explorer 3.0, array elements
	  and object properties do not overlap and cannot overwrite
	  each other. There is an Array()
	  constructor, and arrays created with this constructor have a
	  (read-only in IE 3.0) length property
	  that is automatically maintained so that it always contains
	  a value one greater than the largest index of the array.
      
 
- 	  In Navigator 2.0, object properties and array elements
	  overlap; when you create a new property, it is as if you
	  added a new array element one higher than the highest
	  existing element. There is no built-in
	  Array() constructor, but you can
	  write your own. Also, there is no automatically maintained
	  length property, but it is common to
	  reserve element 0 of an array for a size
	  property (which you update yourself as the array grows).
	
 
- 	  For many algorithms, the size of an array is maintained in a
	  variable externally to an array, and there is no need for a
	  length or size property.
	
 
-  
	  All arrays in JavaScript are implemented as associative
	  arrays, and can be "sparse"--i.e., they can contain
	  non-contiguous elements. Usually, though, you'll use arrays
	  as if they were non-associative, fixed-size arrays like those
	  found in C, C++, and Java.