AFAIK as soon as you'd start mixing idiomatic JS and asm.js, you lose the "special sauce", you only got the special asm.js treatment in browsers when putting a "use asm" at the top of a source file, and that would prevent using regular JS features in the same file.
> An asm.js module can take up to three optional parameters, providing access to external JavaScript code and data:
> - a standard library object, providing access to a limited subset of the JavaScript standard libraries;
> - a foreign function interface (FFI), providing access to custom external JavaScript functions; and
> - a heap buffer, providing a single ArrayBuffer to act as the asm.js heap.
From http://asmjs.org/spec/latest/#introduction:~:text=External%2...
In asm.js you have to treat JS functions and objects as special extern values, just like in WASM.
asm.js - when validated and optimized - is closer to WASM serialized to a JS-like syntax than actual JS.