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14 Commits (26dffce00ae9e96a5407e379c3ac042a24dea9b9)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Mike Gerwitz 13ca9cd852
[copyright] Copyright update after relicensing 2013-12-20 01:11:39 -05:00
Mike Gerwitz 9050c4e4ac
Relicensed under the GPLv3+
This project was originally LGPLv+-licensed to encourage its use in a community
that is largely copyleft-phobic. After further reflection, that was a mistake,
as adoption is not the important factor here---software freedom is.

When submitting ease.js to the GNU project, it was asked if I would be willing
to relicense it under the GPLv3+; I agreed happily, because there is no reason
why we should provide proprietary software any sort of edge. Indeed, proprietary
JavaScript is a huge problem since it is automatically downloaded on the user's
PC generally without them even knowing, and is a current focus for the FSF. As
such, to remain firm in our stance against proprietary JavaScript, relicensing
made the most sense for GNU.

This is likely to upset current users of ease.js. I am not sure of their
number---I have only seen download counts periodically on npmjs.org---but I know
there are at least a small number. These users are free to continue using the
previous LGPL'd releases, but with the understanding that there will be no
further maintenance (not even bug fixes). If possible, users should use the
GPL-licensed versions and release their software as free software.

Here comes GNU ease.js.
2013-12-20 01:10:05 -05:00
Mike Gerwitz 2a76be2461
[copyright] Copyright update 2013-12-20 00:50:54 -05:00
Mike Gerwitz d84b86b21b
Added `proxy' keyword support
The concept of proxy methods will become an important, core concept in ease.js
that will provide strong benefits for creating decorators and proxies, removing
boilerplate code and providing useful metadata to the system. Consider the
following example:

  Class( 'Foo',
  {
      // ...

      'public performOperation': function( bar )
      {
          this._doSomethingWith( bar );
          return this;
      },
  } );

  Class( 'FooDecorator',
  {
      'private _foo': null,

      // ...

      'public performOperation': function( bar )
      {
          return this._foo.performOperation( bar );
      },
  } );

In the above example, `FooDecorator` is a decorator for `Foo`. Assume that the
`getValueOf()` method is undecorated and simply needs to be proxied to its
component --- an instance of `Foo`. (It is not uncommon that a decorator, proxy,
or related class will alter certain functionality while leaving much of it
unchanged.) In order to do so, we can use this generic, boilerplate code

  return this.obj.func.apply( this.obj, arguments );

which would need to be repeated again and again for *each method that needs to
be proxied*. We also have another problem --- `Foo.getValueOf()` returns
*itself*, which `FooDecorator` *also* returns.  This breaks encapsulation, so we
instead need to return ourself:

  'public performOperation': function( bar )
  {
      this._foo.performOperation( bar );
      return this;
  },

Our boilerplate code then becomes:

  var ret = this.obj.func.apply( this.obj, arguments );
  return ( ret === this.obj )
      ? this
      : ret;

Alternatively, we could use the `proxy' keyword:

  Class( 'FooDecorator2',
  {
      'private _foo': null,

      // ...

      'public proxy performOperation': '_foo',
  } );

`FooDecorator2.getValueOf()` and `FooDecorator.getValueOf()` both perform the
exact same task --- proxy the entire call to another object and return its
result, unless the result is the component, in which case the decorator itself
is returned.

Proxies, as of this commit, accomplish the following:
  - All arguments are forwarded to the destination
  - The return value is forwarded to the caller
    - If the destination returns a reference to itself, it will be replaced with
      a reference to the caller's context (`this`).
  - If the call is expected to fail, either because the destination is not an
    object or because the requested method is not a function, a useful error
    will be immediately thrown (rather than the potentially cryptic one that
    would otherwise result, requiring analysis of the stack trace).

N.B. As of this commit, static proxies do not yet function properly.
2012-05-03 09:49:22 -04:00
Mike Gerwitz cdbcada4d2 Copyright year update 2011-12-23 00:09:11 -05:00
Mike Gerwitz e0254f6441 Removed invalid @package tags
Not a valid tag in jsdoc
2011-12-06 20:19:31 -05:00
Mike Gerwitz 2569dacf15 Override keyword is now required to override a virtual method (#19) 2011-08-04 00:32:10 -04:00
Mike Gerwitz 4fea62a8ed [#19] Removed 'final' keyword and all associated logic
- Kept FinalClass'
2011-06-08 01:26:04 -04:00
Mike Gerwitz 8b83e85c43 [#19] Implemented 'virtual' keyword
- Baby steps. 'override' keyword is not yet necessary.
- Final not yet removed
2011-06-08 01:11:53 -04:00
Mike Gerwitz 76bc7361d3 Implemented GH#2 - Keyword restrictions; throw exception when unknown keywords are used 2011-05-22 22:11:57 -04:00
Mike Gerwitz 96f5b8ff58 Multiple spaces now properly handled in keyword parser 2011-01-18 19:33:33 -05:00
Mike Gerwitz 828a366f29 Renamed prop_parse.{parse => parseKeywords} 2010-12-27 23:12:37 -05:00
Mike Gerwitz 87e293e33f Property keyword parser now simply checks for spaces (to be flexible enough to support any keywords in the future) 2010-12-27 23:04:50 -05:00
Mike Gerwitz f705f38640 Began adding prop_parser module and moved existing property keyword parser function into it 2010-12-27 20:56:36 -05:00