I noticed the function Object.factory(char[] className) in D. But it does not work like I hoped it would work; it does not work ;)
An example:
import std.stdio;
class TestClass
{
override string toString()
{
return typeof(this).stringof; // TestClass
}
};
void main(string[] args开发者_JAVA百科)
{
auto i = Object.factory("TestClass");
if (i is null)
{
writeln("Class not found");
}
else
{
writeln("Class string: " ~ i);
}
}
I think this should result in the message: "Class string: TestClass" but it says "Class not found".
Does anybody know why this happens and how I could fix it ?
Or do I need to make my own class factory. For example by make a class with a static array Object[string] classes;
with class instances. When I want a new instance I do this:
auto i = (className in classes);
if (i is null)
{
return null;
}
return i.classinfo.create();
EDIT:
I use it now like this (an example, this is for a web HMVC pattern):
class Page : Controller
{
static this()
{
register(Page.classinfo);
}
protected void registerActions()
{
registerAction("index", &index);
}
public void index()
{
request.response = "Page: " ~ request.params.get("pageID", "0") ~ " in format: " ~ request.params.get("format", "html");
}
};
void main(string[] args)
{
Route.add(
r"page/(\d+)\.(html|json)",
[
1: "pageID",
2: "format"
],
[
"controller": "page" // tell route to use page as controller class
]
);
Route.add(
r"(\S+)/(\S+)",
[
1: "controller", // get controller class from uri
2: "action" // get controller action from uri
]
);
auto request = Request.factory("/page/43.json").execute();
// Headers and response can be accessed like this
// Can be used in http response
uint code = request.getCode();
const(string[string]) headers = request.getHeaders();
string response = request.response;
}
This kind of stuff is hard to do in C++ ;)
Here's one that works:
module irc2;
import std.stdio;
class TestClass
{
override string toString()
{
return typeof(this).stringof; // TestClass
}
};
void main(string[] args)
{
auto i = Object.factory("irc2.TestClass");
if (i is null)
{
writeln("Class not found");
}
else
{
writeln("Class string: " ~ i.toString);
}
}
A few things to note:
- You have to use the fully-qualified class name. What if you had more than one "TestClass" in your program.
- You can't append an object to a string; you have to use toString. That, or simply use
writefln("Class string: %s", i)
.
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