This is a bugfix; the bug was introduced in v0.2.3.
Initially, the implementation created a new object with the root object as
its prototype, taking advantage of ECMAScript's native
overrides/fallthroughs. Unfortunately, IE<=8 had a buggy implementation,
effectively treating the prototype as an empty object. So, rather than
alt.Array === root.Array, alt.Array === undefined.
The fix is simply to reference discrete objects.
Existing functionality is maintained using toString. This is necessary to
support type checking, and to be more consistent with the native Symbol
implementation.
Technically `new FallbackSymbol` is supposed to throw a TypeError, just as
`new Symbol` would, but doing so complicates the constructor unncessarily,
so I am not going to bother with that here.
This is the closest we will get to implementing a concept similar to symbols
in pre-ES6. The intent is that, in an ES5 environment, the caller should
ensure that the object receiving this key will mark it as non-enumerable.
Otherwise, we're out of luck.
The symbol string is pseduo-randomly generated with an attempt to reduce the
likelihood of field collisions and malicious Math.{floor,random} overwrites
(so long as they are clean at the time of loading the module).