Does anyone have any example implementation of making individual object props readOnly/non-configurable? I mean primitive data types. Have tried using ES5 Object API, but hitting a brick wall.
I can't show code, because it's still at that "messy" phase, but basically I'm iterating through an outside object which, itself, holds numeruos objects. Those objects each hold various primitive data types. I have made the outer objects readOnly, non-config, etc, but can't figure out开发者_运维百科 how to do likewise for individual props, the innermost props.
So, if outer.inner.prop === "Hello"
, I want to make that value readOnly
.
Thanks!
UPDATE
I just figured this out, it was all in the for loop I was using to iterate over props. Now I've actually get data descriptors for the props, even the primitive ones. :) Thanks all!
You have to iterate through the inner object, since there is no way to deep-freeze an object using standard ES5 methods.
function deepFreeze(obj) {
Object.keys(obj).forEach(function (key) {
if (typeof obj[key] == 'object')
deepFreeze(obj[key]);
});
Object.freeze(obj);
}
Edit:
Also works for defineProperty
if you don't want to freeze
:
function deepWriteProtect(obj) {
Object.keys(obj).forEach(function (key) {
if (typeof obj[key] == 'object')
deepWriteProtect(obj[key]);
Object.defineProperty(obj, key, { writable: false });
});
}
I'm not 100% sure I understand your question correctly, but from what I gather you are asking for private variables. If so, that can be easily achieved using closures.
function myClass(){
var mySecretProperty = 10;
this.getMySecretProperty = function(){
return mySecretProperty;
}
this.changeMySecretProperty = function(s){
// whatever logic you need for a setter method
mySecretProperty = s;
}
}
var myObj = new MyClass();
myObj.changeMySecretProperty(120);
myObj.getMySecretProperty(); // will return 120
myObj.mySecretProperty // will return undefined
Would the following (ES5) example help? It creates an empty constructor, with a getter for property a
(and no setter, so de facto a
is read only):
var Obj = function(){};
Obj.prototype = {
get a() {return 5;}
}
var x = new Obj;
alert(x.a); //=> 5
x.a = 6; //=> TypeError: setting a property that has only a getter
Not using ES5 you can do
var Obj = function(){
var a = 5;
if (!Obj.prototype.getA) {
Obj.prototype.getA = {
toString: function() {
return a;
}
};
}
}
var y = new Obj;
alert(y.getA); //=> 5
But that is not 100% failsafe: Obj.prototype.getA
can be overwritten.
Here is a jsfiddle showing how you can use ES5 getter/setter definitions to make a property of an object something that can only be fetched. The code looks like this:
var object = {
get x() {
return 17;
}, set x() {
alert("You cannot set x!");
}
};
Of course the getter could obtain the value of the property ("x") from anywhere, like a closure from a constructor or something. The point is that the setter simply does not change the value, so attempts to change it:
object.x = 100;
will not have any effect.
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