/** * Contains visibility object factory * * Copyright (C) 2011, 2013 Mike Gerwitz * * This file is part of GNU ease.js. * * ease.js is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by * the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or * (at your option) any later version. * * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the * GNU General Public License for more details. * * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License * along with this program. If not, see . */ /** * XXX: tightly coupled */ var util = require( __dirname + '/util' ); /** * Initializes visibility object factory * * The visibility object is the "magic" behind ease.js. This factory creates the * object that holds the varying levels of visibility, which are swapped out and * inherited depending on circumstance. * * @constructor */ module.exports = exports = function VisibilityObjectFactory() { // permit omitting 'new' keyword if ( !( this instanceof exports ) ) { // module.exports instead of exports because Closure Compiler seems to // be confused return new module.exports(); } }; /** * Sets up properties * * This includes all members (including private). Private members will be set up * in a separate object, so that they can be easily removed from the mix. That * object will include the destination object in the prototype, so that the * access should be transparent. This object is returned. * * Properties are expected in the following format. Note that keywords are * ignored: * { public: { prop: [ value, { keyword: true } ] } } * * @param {Object} dest destination object * @param {Object} properties properties to copy * @param {Object=} methods methods to copy * * @return {Object} object containing private members and dest as prototype */ exports.prototype.setup = function setup( dest, properties, methods ) { // create the private layer atop of the destination object var obj = this._createPrivateLayer( dest, properties ); // initialize each of the properties for this instance to // ensure we're not sharing references to prototype values this._doSetup( dest, properties[ 'public' ] ); // Do the same for protected, but only if they do not exist already in // public. The reason for this is because the property object is laid /atop/ // of the public members, meaning that a parent's protected members will // take precedence over a subtype's overriding /public/ members. Uh oh. this._doSetup( dest, properties[ 'protected' ], methods[ 'protected' ], true ); // then add the private parts this._doSetup( obj, properties[ 'private' ], methods[ 'private' ] ); return obj; }; /** * Add an extra layer atop the destination object, which will contain the * private members * * The object provided will be used as the prototype for the new private layer, * so the provided object will be accessible on the prototype chain. * * Subtypes may override this method to alter the functionality of the private * visibility object (e.g. to prevent it from being created). * * @param {Object} atop_of object to add private layer atop of * @param {Object} properties properties * * @return {Object} private layer with given object as prototype */ exports.prototype._createPrivateLayer = function( atop_of, properties ) { /** @constructor */ var obj_ctor = function() {}; obj_ctor.prototype = atop_of; // we'll be returning an instance, so that the prototype takes effect var obj = new obj_ctor(); // All protected properties need to be proxied from the private object // (which will be passed as the context) to the object containing protected // values. Otherwise, the protected property values would be set on the // private object, making them inaccessible to subtypes. this.createPropProxy( atop_of, obj, properties[ 'protected' ] ); return obj; }; /** * Set up destination object by copying over properties and methods * * The prot_priv parameter can be used to ignore both explicitly and * implicitly public methods. * * @param {Object} dest destination object * @param {Object} properties properties to copy * @param {Object} methods methods to copy * @param {boolean} prot_priv do not set unless protected or private * * @return {undefined} */ exports.prototype._doSetup = function( dest, properties, methods, prot_priv ) { var hasOwn = Array.prototype.hasOwnProperty; // copy over the methods if ( methods !== undefined ) { for ( var method_name in methods ) { if ( hasOwn.call( methods, method_name ) ) { var pre = dest[ method_name ], kw = pre && pre.___$$keywords$$; // If requested, do not copy the method over if it already // exists in the destination object. Don't use hasOwn here; // unnecessary overhead and we want to traverse any prototype // chains. We do not check the public object directly, for // example, because we need a solution that will work if a proxy // is unsupported by the engine. // // Also note that we need to allow overriding if it exists in // the protected object (we can override protected with // protected). This is the *last* check to ensure a performance // hit is incured *only* if we're overriding protected with // protected. if ( !prot_priv || ( pre === undefined ) || ( kw[ 'private' ] || kw[ 'protected' ] ) ) { dest[ method_name ] = methods[ method_name ]; } } } } // initialize private/protected properties and store in instance data for ( var prop in properties ) { if ( hasOwn.call( properties, prop ) ) { dest[ prop ] = util.clone( properties[ prop ][ 0 ] ); } } } /** * Creates a proxy for all given properties to the given base * * The proxy uses getters/setters to forward all calls to the base. The * destination object will be used as the proxy. All properties within props * will be used proxied. * * To summarize: for each property in props, all gets and sets will be forwarded * to base. * * Please note that this does not use the JS proxy implementation. That will be * done in the future for engines that support it. * * @param {Object} base object to proxy to * @param {Object} dest object to treat as proxy (set getters/setters on) * @param {Object} props properties to proxy * * @return {Object} returns dest */ exports.prototype.createPropProxy = function( base, dest, props ) { var hasOwn = Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty; for ( var prop in props ) { if ( !( hasOwn.call( props, prop ) ) ) { continue; } ( function( prop ) { // just in case it's already defined, so we don't throw an error dest[ prop ] = undefined; // public properties, when set internally, must forward to the // actual variable Object.defineProperty( dest, prop, { set: function( val ) { base[ prop ] = val; }, get: function() { return base[ prop ]; }, enumerable: true, } ); } ).call( null, prop ); } return dest; };