Is there a way to make any function output a console.log statement when it's called by registering a global hook somewhere (that is, without modifying the actual function itself) or via some other means?
Here's a way to augment all functions in the global namespace with the function of your choice:
function augment(withFn) {
var name, fn;
for (name in window) {
fn = window[name];
if (typeof fn === 'function') {
window[name] = (function(name, fn) {
var args = arguments;
return function() {
withFn.apply(this, args);
return fn.apply(this, arguments);
}
})(name, fn);
}
}
}
augment(function(name, fn) {
console.log("calling " + name);
});
One down side is that no functions created after calling augment will have the additional behavior.
As to me, this looks like the most elegant solution:
(function() {
var call = Function.prototype.call;
Function.prototype.call = function() {
console.log(this, arguments); // Here you can do whatever actions you want
return call.apply(this, arguments);
};
}());
Proxy Method to log Function calls
There is a new way using Proxy to achieve this functionality in JS.
assume that we want to have a console.log whenever a function of a specific class is called:
class TestClass {
a() {
this.aa = 1;
}
b() {
this.bb = 1;
}
}
const foo = new TestClass()
foo.a() // nothing get logged
we can replace our class instantiation with a Proxy that overrides each property of this class. so:
class TestClass {
a() {
this.aa = 1;
}
b() {
this.bb = 1;
}
}
const logger = className => {
return new Proxy(new className(), {
get: function(target, name, receiver) {
if (!target.hasOwnProperty(name)) {
if (typeof target[name] === "function") {
console.log(
"Calling Method : ",
name,
"|| on : ",
target.constructor.name
);
}
return new Proxy(target[name], this);
}
return Reflect.get(target, name, receiver);
}
});
};
const instance = logger(TestClass)
instance.a() // output: "Calling Method : a || on : TestClass"
check that this actually works in Codepen
Remember that using Proxy gives you a lot more functionality than to just logging console names.
Also this method works in Node.js too.
If you want more targeted logging, the following code will log function calls for a particular object. You can even modify Object prototypes so that all new instances get logging too. I used Object.getOwnPropertyNames instead of for...in, so it works with ECMAScript 6 classes, which don't have enumerable methods.
function inject(obj, beforeFn) {
for (let propName of Object.getOwnPropertyNames(obj)) {
let prop = obj[propName];
if (Object.prototype.toString.call(prop) === '[object Function]') {
obj[propName] = (function(fnName) {
return function() {
beforeFn.call(this, fnName, arguments);
return prop.apply(this, arguments);
}
})(propName);
}
}
}
function logFnCall(name, args) {
let s = name + '(';
for (let i = 0; i < args.length; i++) {
if (i > 0)
s += ', ';
s += String(args[i]);
}
s += ')';
console.log(s);
}
inject(Foo.prototype, logFnCall);
Here's some Javascript which replaces adds console.log to every function in Javascript; Play with it on Regex101:
$re = "/function (.+)\\(.*\\)\\s*\\{/m";
$str = "function example(){}";
$subst = "$& console.log(\"$1()\");";
$result = preg_replace($re, $subst, $str);
It's a 'quick and dirty hack' but I find it useful for debugging. If you have a lot of functions, beware because this will add a lot of code. Also, the RegEx is simple and might not work for more complex function names/declaration.
You can actually attach your own function to console.log for everything that loads.
console.log = function(msg) {
// Add whatever you want here
alert(msg);
}
Related
I can't seem to find the way to overload the [] operator in javascript. Anyone out there know?
I was thinking on the lines of ...
MyClass.operator.lookup(index)
{
return myArray[index];
}
or am I not looking at the right things.
You can do this with ES6 Proxy (available in all modern browsers)
var handler = {
get: function(target, name) {
return "Hello, " + name;
}
};
var proxy = new Proxy({}, handler);
console.log(proxy.world); // output: Hello, world
console.log(proxy[123]); // output: Hello, 123
Check details on MDN.
You can't overload operators in JavaScript.
It was proposed for ECMAScript 4 but rejected.
I don't think you'll see it anytime soon.
The simple answer is that JavaScript allows access to children of an Object via the square brackets.
So you could define your class:
MyClass = function(){
// Set some defaults that belong to the class via dot syntax or array syntax.
this.some_property = 'my value is a string';
this['another_property'] = 'i am also a string';
this[0] = 1;
};
You will then be able to access the members on any instances of your class with either syntax.
foo = new MyClass();
foo.some_property; // Returns 'my value is a string'
foo['some_property']; // Returns 'my value is a string'
foo.another_property; // Returns 'i am also a string'
foo['another_property']; // Also returns 'i am also a string'
foo.0; // Syntax Error
foo[0]; // Returns 1
foo['0']; // Returns 1
Use a proxy. It was mentioned elsewhere in the answers but I think that this is a better example:
var handler = {
get: function(target, name) {
if (name in target) {
return target[name];
}
if (name == 'length') {
return Infinity;
}
return name * name;
}
};
var p = new Proxy({}, handler);
p[4]; //returns 16, which is the square of 4.
We can proxy get | set methods directly. Inspired by this.
class Foo {
constructor(v) {
this.data = v
return new Proxy(this, {
get: (obj, key) => {
if (typeof(key) === 'string' && (Number.isInteger(Number(key)))) // key is an index
return obj.data[key]
else
return obj[key]
},
set: (obj, key, value) => {
if (typeof(key) === 'string' && (Number.isInteger(Number(key)))) // key is an index
return obj.data[key] = value
else
return obj[key] = value
}
})
}
}
var foo = new Foo([])
foo.data = [0, 0, 0]
foo[0] = 1
console.log(foo[0]) // 1
console.log(foo.data) // [1, 0, 0]
As brackets operator is actually property access operator, you can hook on it with getters and setters. For IE you will have to use Object.defineProperty() instead. Example:
var obj = {
get attr() { alert("Getter called!"); return 1; },
set attr(value) { alert("Setter called!"); return value; }
};
obj.attr = 123;
The same for IE8+:
Object.defineProperty("attr", {
get: function() { alert("Getter called!"); return 1; },
set: function(value) { alert("Setter called!"); return value; }
});
For IE5-7 there's onpropertychange event only, which works for DOM elements, but not for other objects.
The drawback of the method is you can only hook on requests to predefined set of properties, not on arbitrary property without any predefined name.
one sneaky way to do this is by extending the language itself.
step 1
define a custom indexing convention, let's call it, "[]".
var MyClass = function MyClass(n) {
this.myArray = Array.from(Array(n).keys()).map(a => 0);
};
Object.defineProperty(MyClass.prototype, "[]", {
value: function(index) {
return this.myArray[index];
}
});
...
var foo = new MyClass(1024);
console.log(foo["[]"](0));
step 2
define a new eval implementation. (don't do this this way, but it's a proof of concept).
var MyClass = function MyClass(length, defaultValue) {
this.myArray = Array.from(Array(length).keys()).map(a => defaultValue);
};
Object.defineProperty(MyClass.prototype, "[]", {
value: function(index) {
return this.myArray[index];
}
});
var foo = new MyClass(1024, 1337);
console.log(foo["[]"](0));
var mini_eval = function(program) {
var esprima = require("esprima");
var tokens = esprima.tokenize(program);
if (tokens.length == 4) {
var types = tokens.map(a => a.type);
var values = tokens.map(a => a.value);
if (types.join(';').match(/Identifier;Punctuator;[^;]+;Punctuator/)) {
if (values[1] == '[' && values[3] == ']') {
var target = eval(values[0]);
var i = eval(values[2]);
// higher priority than []
if (target.hasOwnProperty('[]')) {
return target['[]'](i);
} else {
return target[i];
}
return eval(values[0])();
} else {
return undefined;
}
} else {
return undefined;
}
} else {
return undefined;
}
};
mini_eval("foo[33]");
the above won't work for more complex indexes but it can be with stronger parsing.
alternative:
instead of resorting to creating your own superset language, you can instead compile your notation to the existing language, then eval it. This reduces the parsing overhead to native after the first time you use it.
var compile = function(program) {
var esprima = require("esprima");
var tokens = esprima.tokenize(program);
if (tokens.length == 4) {
var types = tokens.map(a => a.type);
var values = tokens.map(a => a.value);
if (types.join(';').match(/Identifier;Punctuator;[^;]+;Punctuator/)) {
if (values[1] == '[' && values[3] == ']') {
var target = values[0];
var i = values[2];
// higher priority than []
return `
(${target}['[]'])
? ${target}['[]'](${i})
: ${target}[${i}]`
} else {
return 'undefined';
}
} else {
return 'undefined';
}
} else {
return 'undefined';
}
};
var result = compile("foo[0]");
console.log(result);
console.log(eval(result));
You need to use Proxy as explained, but it can ultimately be integrated into a class constructor
return new Proxy(this, {
set: function( target, name, value ) {
...}};
with 'this'. Then the set and get (also deleteProperty) functions will fire. Although you get a Proxy object which seems different it for the most part works to ask the compare ( target.constructor === MyClass ) it's class type etc. [even though it's a function where target.constructor.name is the class name in text (just noting an example of things that work slightly different.)]
So you're hoping to do something like
var whatever = MyClassInstance[4];
?
If so, simple answer is that Javascript does not currently support operator overloading.
Have a look at Symbol.iterator. You can implement a user-defined ##iterator method to make any object iterable.
The well-known Symbol.iterator symbol specifies the default iterator for an object. Used by for...of.
Example:
class MyClass {
constructor () {
this._array = [data]
}
*[Symbol.iterator] () {
for (let i=0, n=this._array.length; i<n; i++) {
yield this._array[i]
}
}
}
const c = new MyClass()
for (const element of [...c]) {
// do something with element
}
Let's say I have a function named fna() that does a simple thing such as:
var fna = function(ar) {
console.log("argument: ", ar);
return "return value is argument too: " + ar;
}
fna() is coded by some other developer and I can't access to it. He didn't bother casting any events and when it is called, I have to be aware of it. Hopefully, his method is accessible by window.fna().
I want some additional code to be executed. Let's say, add this console.log
var fna = function(ar) {
console.log("Hola, I am some additional stuff being rewired");
console.log("argument:", ar);
return "return value is argument too: " + ar;
}
And I want this to be executed even when called from fnb() by some other part of the code.
var fnb = function() {
return fna("Bonjour, I am fnb and I call fna");
}
Here is a way I found, using the utils.rewire() method. utils is just some utility belt, and it could be added to your favorite framework as a plugin. Unfortunately, it only works on Firefox.
var utils = utils || {};
// Let's rewire a function. i.e. My.super.method()
utils.rewire = function(functionFullName, callback) {
var rewired = window[functionFullName];
console.log("%s() is being rewired", functionFullName)
window[functionFullName] = function() {
callback();
return rewired.apply(this, arguments);
}
}
Use it like this.
utils.rewire("fna",function(){
console.log("Hola, I am some additional stuffs being rewired");
});
This seems to work such as shown in this jsbin, but (and here is my question:) How do I rewire obja.fna()?
var obja = {
fna = function(ar) {
console.log("argument:", ar);
return "return value is argument too: " + ar;
}
};
I cannot make it work to rewire the some.object.method() method.
Extra bonus question: Is there a more cleaner way to do this? Out-of-the-box clean concise and magic library?
Refactor rewire into a rewireMethod function which acts on any given object:
var utils = utils || {};
utils.rewireMethod = function (obj, functionName, prefunc) {
var original = obj[functionName];
obj[functionName] = function () {
prefunc();
return original.apply(this, arguments);
};
};
Note that rewire can now be written as:
utils.rewire = function (functionName, prefunc) {
utils.rewireMethod(window, functionName, prefunc);
};
Then you just call it as:
utils.rewireMethod(obja, "fna", function () {
console.log("Hola, I am some additional stuff being rewired");
});
Note that nothing special is required if you have a method like window.ideeli.Search.init(). In that case, the object is window.ideeli.Search, and the method name is init:
utils.rewireMethod(window.ideeli.Search, "init", function () {
console.log("Oh yeah, nested objects.");
});
Add a parameter to rewire that is the object containing the function. If it's a global function, pass in window.
var utils = utils || {};
// let's rewire a function. i.e. My.super.method()
utils.rewire = function(object, functionName, callback) {
var rewired = object[functionName];
console.log("%s() is being rewired", functionName)
object[functionName] = function() {
callback();
return rewired.apply(this, arguments);
}
}
utils.rewire(some.object, "method", function(){} );
You can simply use a closure to create a generic hook function that allows you to specify another function to be called immediately before or after the original function:
function hookFunction(fn, preFn, postFn) {
function hook() {
var retVal;
if (preFn) {
preFn.apply(this, arguments);
}
retVal = fn.apply(this, arguments);
if (postFn) {
postFn.apply(this, arguments);
}
return retVal;
}
return hook;
}
So, for any function that you want to hook, you just call hookFunction and pass it the function you want to hook and then an optional pre and post function or yours. The pre and post function are passed the same arguments that the original function was.
So, if your original function was this:
var fna = function(ar) {
console.log("argument:",ar);
return "return value is argument too:"+ar;
}
And, you want something to happen every time that function is called right before it's called, you would do this:
fna = hookFunction(fna, function() {
console.log("Hola, I am some additional stuff being rewired right before");
});
or if you wanted it to happen right after the original was called, you could do it like this:
fna = hookFunction(fna, null, function() {
console.log("Hola, I am some additional stuff being rewired right after");
});
Working demo: http://jsfiddle.net/jfriend00/DMgn6/
This can be used with methods on objects and arbitrary nesting levels of objects and methods.
var myObj = function(msg) {
this.greeting = msg;
};
myObj.prototype = {
test: function(a) {
log("myObj.test: " + this.greeting);
}
}
var x = new myObj("hello");
x.test = hookFunction(x.test, mypreFunc2, myPostFunc2);
x.test("hello");
Based on Claudiu's answer, which seems to be the most appreciated way, here is a solution using a for loop and proxying the context... But still, I find this ugly.
var utils = utils || {};
// Let's rewire a function. i.e. My.super.method()
utils.rewire = function(method, callback) {
var obj = window;
var original = function() {};
var tree = method.split(".");
var fun = tree.pop();
console.log(tree);
// Parse through the hierarchy
for (var i = 0; i < tree.length; i++) {
obj = obj[tree[i]];
}
if(typeof(obj[fun]) === "function") {
original = obj[fun];
}
var cb = callback.bind(obj);
obj[fun] = function(ar) {
cb();
return original.apply(this, arguments);
}
}
Well, this looks strange. Consider this
function wrap(fn, wrapper) {
return function() {
var a = arguments;
return wrapper(function() { return fn.apply(this, a) })
}
}
Example:
function foo(a, b) {
console.log([a, b])
return a + b
}
bar = wrap(foo, function(original) {
console.log("hi")
var ret = original()
console.log("there")
return ret
})
console.log(bar(11,22))
Result:
hi
[11, 22]
there
33
To wrap object methods, just bind them:
obj = {
x: 111,
foo: function(a, b) {
console.log([a, b, this.x])
}
}
bar = wrap(obj.foo.bind(obj), function(fn) {
console.log("hi")
return fn()
})
I was wondering if there is a way having for instance:
var klass = {
getName : function () { return "myname"; }
}
and doing klass.getName();
having a method fire before getName is actually called? In Groovy all method calls can for instance be listened to if an invoke method is added:
var klass = {
invoke function() { console.log("fires before getName()") ; },
getName : function () { return "myname"; }
}
I know this a long shot, but worth a try.
Not interested in altering the way the method is actually invoked: klass.getName()
The obvious answer is to simply call invoke in your getName method. If, for whatever reason, you don't wanna do that, you can proxy the methods of klass afterwards:
// loop through all properties of klass
for (var i in klass) {
// skip if it's not a custom property, not a function or the invoke function
// (to prevent infinite nested calls)
if(!klass.hasOwnProperty(i) || typeof klass[i] !== 'function'
|| i === 'invoke') {
continue;
}
// add the invoke() method as a proxy to the current method
var old = klass[i];
klass[i] = function () {
klass.invoke.apply(this, arguments);
return old.apply(this, arguments);
};
}
You can also put everything together neatly like this:
var klass = (function () {
this.invoke = function () {
console.log('called invoke()');
};
this.getName = function () {
return "called getName()";
};
(function (_this) {
for (var i in _this) {
if (!_this.hasOwnProperty(i) || typeof _this[i] !== 'function'
|| i === 'invoke') {
continue;
}
var old = _this[i];
_this[i] = function () {
_this.invoke.apply(_this, arguments);
return old.apply(_this, arguments);
};
}
})(this);
return this;
})();
console.log(klass.getName());
I am trying to create an object that gets returned without the new keyword in javascript?
My code structure so far;
myLib.func = (function() {
"use strict";
function func() {
this._init();
};
func.prototype._init = function() {
this.someVar = 5;
};
Return func;
})();
This obviously only works when using the new keyword;
new myLib.func();
How can I make it so that I can just do;
var func = myLib.func();
But it would still return an object that is exactly the same as the first example?
What I have tried
myLib.func = (function() {
"use strict";
function func() {
if (window === this) {
return new myLib.func();
} else {
this._init();
}
};
func.prototype._init = function() {
this.someVar = 5;
};
Return func;
})();
This does not work I learned from an example on slide 25 of John Resig's tips on building a library, http://ejohn.org/blog/building-a-javascript-library/
I know there are already existing frameworks, but rolling my own will make me learn alot, and as you can see that isn't alot at the moment!
In strict mode, the this will be undefined by default. You can account for this feature by adding it to your condition:
if (window === this || undefined === this) {
return new myLib.func();
} else {
this._init();
}
or by checking whether the current object is an instance of the constructor (using instanceof):
if (this instanceof func) {
this._init();
} else {
return new func();
}
(PS. You've got a typo in your code; JavaScript is case-sensitive, so you should use return instead of Return at the end)
If myLib.func is your class name, you cannot call it like var func = myLib.func();.
However, you could wrap this latter into another function, such that you get
var factory = function(){
var func = myLib.func();
return func;
}
If you don't really need public / private methods, you can use object literal
var myLib = {};
myLib.func = {
_init: function() {
this.someVar = 5;
},
doSomething: function(a, b) {
return a + b;
}
};
This will be a singleton object, usually it's enough for javascript applciation. If you need many instances of an object, you'll be forced to put a "new" keyword somewhere.
This is what I'm doing right now.
var foo = function() {
var x = someComplicatedComputationThatMayTakeMoreTime();
this.foo = function() { return x; };
return x;
}
It works but only if foo is called as a function like so
foo();
But what if I want to call it as a normal variable with a value? I could modify the code to be
var foo = function() {
var x = someComplicatedComputationThatMayTakeMoreTime();
this.foo = x;
return x;
}
That would allow me to only call it once as a function and after that as a regular variable. But it's still not what I want. Plus it gets complicated if it accidentally gets called as a function again, returning an error.
Is this even possible in JavaScript?
BTW, this is for a Chrome/Firefox extension, so IE compatibility does not matter.
Ended up using toString because getters don't allow me to redefine the whole attribute, a function must be associated with it. And toString has cleaner syntax.
How about using toString?
var foo = function() {
function someComplicatedComputationThatMayTakeMoreTime() {
//your calculations
}
return {
toString: function() {
return someComplicatedComputationThatMayTakeMoreTime();
}
}
}
More about Object-to-Primitive Conversions in JavaScript
EDIT based on comment. Use a singleton (I think it's called):
myObject.prop = (function(){
function someComplicatedComputationThatMayTakeMoreTime() {
//your calculations
}
return {
toString: function() {
return someComplicatedComputationThatMayTakeMoreTime();
}
}
})()
If only Internet Explorer didn't exist, you could use getters and setters as described by John Resig in this blog article:
John Resig: JavaScript Getters and Setters
... They allow you to bind special functions to an object that look like normal object properties, but actually execute hidden functions instead.
Using a function is your best option for now, however the new JavaScript standard (ECMAScript 5th Ed.) which is being implemented now by all major browser vendors, gives you a method to create accessor properties, where you can define a property with a get and set functions that will be internally called, without worrying to treat this properties as functions, e.g.:
var obj = {};
Object.defineProperty(obj, 'foo', {
get: function () { // getter logic
return 'foo!';
},
set: function (value) {
// setter logic
}
});
obj.foo; // "foo!", no function call
This new standard will take some time to be implemented for all browsers, (the IE9 preview version really disappointed me), and I wouldn't recommend you to use it for production, unless you have total control on the environment where your application will be used.
What I think you want is a lazily instantiated variable, which can be implemented like this.
var myProperty = null;
function getMyProperty() {
return (myProperty = myProperty || builder());
}
This is not practical on the web because IE does not support it, but you can look at
https://developer.mozilla.org/en/defineGetter for examples how to do this.
There are a couple ways to do it, here is one example:
var data = {};
data.__defineGetter__("prop",
(function () {
var value = null;
return function () {
if (null == value) {
value = getYourValueHere();
}
return value;
};
})());
and now you can use it like:
var a = data.prop;
var b = data.prop;
I would recommend a variation on ChaosPandion's answer, but with a closure.
var myProperty = (function () {
var innerProperty = null;
return function() {
return (innerProperty = innerProperty || someComplicatedComputationThatMayTakeMoreTime());
};
})();
and then use myProperty() every time you need to access the variable.
You could define a JavaScript getter. From the Apple JavaScript Coding Guidelines:
myObject.__defineGetter__( "myGetter", function() { return this.myVariable; } );
var someVariable = myObject.myGetter;
See John Resig's post, JavaScript Getters and Setters, and the Defining Getters and Setters page at the Mozilla Developer Centre for more information.
I would use explicit lazy evaluation. Here's my implementation of it based on Scheme's take:
var delay, lazy, force, promise, promiseForced, promiseRunning;
(function () {
var getValue = function () {
return this.value;
};
var RUNNING = {};
var DelayThunk = function (nullaryFunc) {
this.value = nullaryFunc;
};
DelayThunk.prototype.toString = function () {
return "[object Promise]";
};
DelayThunk.prototype.force = function () {
if (promiseRunning (this)) {
throw new Error ("Circular forcing of a promise.");
}
var nullaryFunc = this.value;
this.value = RUNNING;
this.value = nullaryFunc ();
this.force = getValue;
return this.value;
};
var LazyThunk = function (nullaryFunc) {
DelayThunk.call (this, nullaryFunc);
};
LazyThunk.prototype = new DelayThunk (null);
LazyThunk.prototype.constructor = LazyThunk;
LazyThunk.prototype.force = function () {
var result = DelayThunk.prototype.force.call (this);
while (result instanceof LazyThunk) {
result = DelayThunk.prototype.force.call (result);
}
return force (result);
};
delay = function (nullaryFunc) {
return new DelayThunk (nullaryFunc);
};
lazy = function (nullaryFunc) {
return new LazyThunk (nullaryFunc);
};
force = function (expr) {
if (promise (expr)) {
return expr.force ();
}
return expr;
};
promise = function (expr) {
return expr instanceof DelayThunk;
};
promiseForced = function (expr) {
return expr.force === getValue || !promise (expr);
};
promiseRunning = function (expr) {
return expr.value === RUNNING || !promise (expr);
};
}) ();
Example Syntax:
var x = lazy (function () { return expression; });
var y = force (x);
var z = delay (function () { return expression; });
var w = force (z);
Note values are stored once evaluated, so repeated forcing will not do extra computations.
Example usage:
function makeThunk (x, y, z) {
return lazy (function () {
// lots of work done here
});
}
var thunk = makeThunk (arg1, arg2, arg3);
if (condition) {
output (force (thunk));
output (force (thunk)); // no extra work done; no extra side effects either
}
You can use the javascript Proxy class for creating such functionality.
var object = {};
var handler = {
resolvers: {},
get ( target, property, proxy ) {
if ( ! target.hasOwnProperty( property ) && this.resolvers.hasOwnProperty( property ) ) {
// execute the getter for the property;
target[ property ] = this.resolvers[ property ]();
}
return target[ property ];
},
set ( target, property, value, receiver ) {
// if the value is function set as a resolver
if ( typeof value === 'function' ) {
this.resolvers[property] = value;
// otherwise set value to target
} else {
target.property = value;
}
},
has ( target, property, receiver ) {
//true when proxy handler has either a resolver or target has a value;
return this.resolvers.hasOwnProperty( property ) || target.hasOwnProperty( property );
}
};
var lazyObject = new Proxy( object, handler );
Now you can use it like this:
'exampleField' in lazyObject; //returns false
lazyObject.exampleField = function(){ return 'my value' }; // add a resolver function
'exampleField' in lazyObject; //returns true
lazyObject.exampleField; //executes your resolver function and returns 'my value'
This example is to demonstrate the working. You can change after your needs.
Here is a fiddle with a demonstration