NAME¶
JE::Types - JavaScript types and objects
This is just documentation, not a module.
DESCRIPTION¶
The various JavaScript types and objects are represented by Perl classes in JE
(which are listed below). This document describes the basic interface
implemented by these classes. Information specific to each class can be found
on its own manual page.
UPGRADING VALUES¶
When a value is passed from Perl to JavaScript, it will be "upgraded"
to a Perl object representing a JavaScript value. This is done by the
"upgrade" method of the global object.
If the value to be upgraded is a blessed reference, and the class into which it
is blessed has been bound using JE's "bind_class" method, it is
wrapped up in a proxy object that provides the methods JS needs. A blessed
reference whose class has not been bound will be left alone (we assume you
know what you are doing). Otherwise the conversion is as follows:
From To
-------------------------
undef undefined
array ref Array
hash ref Object
code ref Function
'0' number
other scalar string
WARNING: The 'upgrading' of simple scalars (strings/numbers) and regexps
is still subject to change.
To do: Make &JE::upgrade detect whether a simple scalar is a string
or number.
To do: Convert Regexp objects to JE::Object::RegExp objects.
WHICH CLASSES ARE WHICH¶
Each built-in JavaScript class or primitive type is a Perl class underneath.
Here is the complete list of object classes:
JavaScript Perl
-----------------
Object JE::Object
Function JE::Object::Function
Array JE::Object::Array
String JE::Object::String
Boolean JE::Object::Boolean
Number JE::Object::Number
Date JE::Object::Date
RegExp JE::Object::RegExp
Error JE::Object::Error
RangeError JE::Object::Error::RangeError
ReferenceError JE::Object::Error::ReferenceError
SyntaxError JE::Object::Error::SyntaxError
TypeError JE::Object::Error::TypeError
URIError JE::Object::Error::URIError
And here are the primitive types:
string JE::String
number JE::Number
boolean JE::Boolean
null JE::Null
undefined JE::Undefined
And I might also mention a few special cases:
Global JE
Math JE::Object::Math
Arguments JE::Object::Function::Arguments
Function scope JE::Object::Function::Call
RegExp constructor JE::Object::Function::RegExpConstructor
The last three are for internal use.
PUBLIC API¶
Using JS Values as Scalars¶
Every JS data type can be used as a string, boolean or number. It works exactly
as it does in JavaScript. For example:
$num = $je->eval('42');
$num2 = $je->eval('NaN');
print $num2; # prints NaN
print 0+$num2; # prints nan or NaN, depending or your system
# (or something really weird on Windows).
$zero_str = $je->eval("'0'");
print "true" if $zero_str; # prints 'true'
print "false" unless 0+$zero_str; # prints 'false'
$false = $je->eval('false');
print $false; # prints 'false'
print "false" unless $false; # also prints 'false'
Property Access¶
To access the property of a JS object, or of the JS environment itself (i.e., a
global variable), just use it as a hash ref:
$je->{String}; # gives you the String constructor function
$je->{undefined}; # the undefined value
my $obj = $je->eval('var obj = new Object; return obj');
$obj->{foo} = 'bar';
"keys" will return a list of the object's enumerable properties,
including those inherited from its prototype. The following example prints
'baz foo ':
$obj = $je->eval('Object.prototype.foo="bar"; ({baz:43}) ');
print "$_ " for keys %$obj;
"exists" and "delete" act upon properties of the object
itself, ignoring those of its prototype, so "exists $obj->{foo}"
will return false.
Calling Methods¶
To call a method on an object or primitive data type, use the "method"
method:
my $number = $je->eval('42');
$number->method('toString', 16); # returns the number in hexadecimal
Calling Functions¶
Just use a function as though it were a coderef:
$je->{Array}->();
If you need to specify the invocant ('this' value), use the
"call_with" method:
$je->{Number}{prototype}{toString}->call_with($je->eval('42'), 16);
Just Getting a Simple Perl Scalar¶
To convert one of the fancy objects returned by JE into a simple Perl value, use
the "value" method.
$number->value; # simple Perl scalar
$str->value; # likewise
$obj->value; # hash ref
$array->value; # array ref
Currently the "value" method of objects and arrays is not recursive,
but I plan to make it so later on. The only way to get consistent behaviour
between this and future versions is to pass "recursive => 0" as
arguments.
DATA TYPE API (in more detail)¶
If you are going to write your own custom data types, proxy objects, or
subclasses of JE's classes, you'll need to read this. If not, you shouldn't
need to, but you might like to anyway. :-)
Be warned that some of the methods described here can be hard to use, and can
easily result in code that's hard to debug, if misused. This applies to those
that expect their arguments already to be objects compatible with the
JE::Types interface. If you are not sure that a value you have is such, run it
through the global object's "upgrade" method (or just use the
"PUBLIC API", above).
These are the methods that the JavaScript engine itself uses (as opposed to
those provided for convenient access from the Perl side). Each class provides
whichever of the following methods are applicable. If an object does not
support a particular method, a TypeError will be thrown when JavaScript code
(indirectly) tries to call that method. (For instance,
"'some_string'()" will attempt to call the "call" method
of JE::String, thus resulting in a TypeError).
- prop($name)
- prop($name, $new_value)
- Gets or sets a property. Setting a property returns the new
value. The return value will be a Perl undef if the property does not
exist. See also JE::Object, for the "prop({ ... })"
usage.
The new value is expected already to be an object compatible with the
JE::Types interface.
- keys
- Returns a list of the names of enumerable properties. This
is a list of Perl strings, not JE::Strings.
- delete($name)
- Deletes the property named $name, if it is deletable. If
the property did not exist or it was deletable, then true is returned. If
the property exists and could not be deleted, false is returned.
JE::Object will also take a second argument, that allows one to indicate
whether an undeletable property should be deleted. This is required by
custom classes if the object in question is the global object.
The return value is a Perl scalar, not a JE::Boolean.
- value
- This returns a value that is supposed to be useful in Perl.
The "value" method of a JE::Object::Array, for instance,
produces an array ref.
- call(@args)
- Runs the code associated with the object if it is a
function. The arguments are passed as-is, and are not upgraded.
- apply($obj, @args)
- Runs the code associated with the object if it is a
function. $obj will be passed to the function as its invocant (its 'this'
value). The arguments are passed, as-is, and are not upgraded.
- construct(@args)
- This is just like calling a function in JS with the
"new" keyword (which itself calls this method). It calls the
constructor, if this function has one (functions written in JS don't have
this). Otherwise, an empty object will be created and passed to the
function as its invocant. The return value of the function will be
returned if it is an object. Otherwise it will be discarded, and the
object originally passed to the function will be returned instead
(possibly modified).
- exists($property_name)
- Returns a boolean indicating whether the property exists
and is not inherited from a prototype. Used by
"Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty". (The "in" operator
checks to see whether the return value of "prop" is defined.)
To do: Implement this method in subclasses of JE::Object.
- is_readonly($property_name)
- Not supported by the primitive JE classes. This returns a
boolean indicating whether a given property is readonly. If it doesn't
exist, then the "is_readonly" method of the object's prototype
is called with the same arguments. If there is no prototype, false is
returned. This is used internally by JE::Object's "prop"
method.
- is_enum($property_name)
- Not supported (yet) by the primitive JE classes. This
returns a boolean indicating whether a given property is enumerable. This
is used by "Object.prototype.propertyIsEnumerable".
- typeof
- Returns a Perl string containing the type of the object.
Used by the JS "typeof" operator.
- class
- This applies to object classes only (though it is going to
change, so that primitives can pretend to be objects). It returns a Perl
string containing the type of object. This is only used by the default
JavaScript "toString" method. If you create your own object
class without subclassing JE::Object, you should still provide the
"class" method, so that this JS code will still work:
YourClass.prototype.toString = Object.prototype.toString;
(new YourClass).toString();
- id
- This returns a unique id for the object or primitive, used
by the JavaScript "===" operator. This id is unique as a
string, not as a number.
The JE primitive classes provide a unique string beginning with the data
type. The JE::Object and its subclasses return the memory address of the
object itself. If you subclass JE::Object, you should not have to
implement this method, unless you have multiple objects that you would
like JS to consider the same object.
Note that the id 'num:nan' is treated specially. It is never considered
equal to itself.
- primitive
- Returns true or false.
- prototype
- prototype ( $obj )
- This applies to objects only, not to primitives. This
method returns the prototype of the object, or undef if there is no
prototype. If $obj is specified, the prototype is set to that object
first. The "prop" method uses this method, as does
"JE::Object->new".
- to_primitive($preferred_type)
- to_boolean
- to_string
- to_number
- to_object
- These each perform the appropriate type conversion.
$preferred_type, which is optional, must be either 'string' or 'number'.
Calling "to_string" or "to_number" on a object is not
exactly the same as calling "to_primitive('string')" or
"to_primitive('number')", because the argument to
"to_primitive" is merely a suggestion.
The last four methods in this list should not be overridden by subclasses of
JE::Object.
- global
- Returns a reference to the global object.
- taint($taint_brush)
- This will only be called if it is implemented. Of JE's
types, only primitive strings and numbers implement this.
$taint_brush will always be a tainted empty string. If the object's internal
value is not tainted, this method should return a tainted clone of the
object. Otherwise, it should return the object itself.
SEE ALSO¶
JE and all the modules listed above under "WHICH CLASSES ARE
WHICH".