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Reflection in Javascript  

程序员文章站 2022-06-08 08:45:21
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原文

Reflection in Javascript

It’s very easy to do reflection in Javascript. Reflection is when your code looks onto itself to discover its variables and functions. It allows two different Javascript codebases to learn about each other, and it’s useful for exploring third-party APIs.

Preamble

In Javascript, all objects are hashes/associative arrays/dictionaries. A hash is like an array, except that values are associated with unique key string rather than a numeric index.

Adding a new variable to an object is as simple as assigning a new value to a key in the object.

You can declare everything in place:

var o = {
	count: 0,
	name: 'Jane Doe',
	greeting: function() { return "Hi"; }
};
o.greeting();

Or you can start with a blank object and assign things later:

var o = {};

o.count = 0;
o.name = 'Jane Doe';
o.greeting = function() { return "Hi"; };

o.greeting();

Or you can do the same, but in a different notation:

var o = {};

o['count'] = 0;
o['name'] = 'Jane Doe';
o['greeting'] = function() { return "Hi"; }

o.greeting();

The last is especially handy because it allows you to go from the string name of the variable to the variable without the performance penalties ofeval().

{}is synonymous withnew Object().

Reflection

The loop below pops up a dialog box with the name and value of every variable in object:

for (var member in object) {
	alert('Name: ' + member);
	alert('Value: ' + object[member]);
}

Everything in Javascript is an object. Functions are objects!documentandwindoware objects. The most reliable reference for Javascript in a given browser is reflection into its innards.

Finally, some slightly more useful code:

/**
	Returns the names of all the obj's
	 variables and functions in a sorted
	 array
*/
function getMembers(obj) {
	var members = new Array();
	var i = 0;
	
	for (var member in obj) {
		members[i] = member;
		i++;
	}
	
	return members.sort();
}

/**
	Print the names of all the obj's variables
	 and functions in an HTML element with id
*/
function printMembers(obj, id) {
	var members = getMembers(obj);
	var display = document.getElementById(id);
	
	for (var i = 0; i < members.length; i++) {
		var member = members[i];
		var value = obj[member];
		display.innerHTML += member + ' = ';
		display.innerHTML += value + '<br>';
	}
}

More sophisticated uses are left as an exercise for the reader. :-)