The good news is that JavaScript is flexible enough to let you decide how to do that ... and here I am with a simple proposal that does not hurt, but can make life easier and more intuitive in modern JS environments.
Unobtrusive Object.prototype.define
How To
Well, the handy way you expect.The method returns the object itself, so it is possible to define one or more property runtime and chain different kind of definitions, as example splitting properties from method and protected properties from protected methods.
var o = {}.define("test", "OK");
o.test; // OK
Multiple properties can share same defaults:
var o = {}.define(["name", "_name"], "unknown");
o.a; // unknown
o._a; // unknown
Methods are immutable by default and properties or methods prefixed with an underscore are by default not enumerable.
function Person() {}
Person.protoype.define(
["getName", "setName", "_name"],
[
function getName() {
return this._name;
},
function setName(_name) {
this._name = _name;
},
"unknown"
]
);
// by convention, _name property is not enumerable
var me = new Person;
me.getName(); // unknown
me.setName("WebReflection");
me.getName(); // WebReflection
for (var key in me) {
if (key === "_name") {
throw "this should never happen";
}
}
Last, but not least, if the descriptor is an object you decide how to configure the property.
var iDecide = {}.define("whatIsIt", {
value:"it does not matter",
enumerable: false
});
for (var key in iDecide) {
if (key === whatIsIt) {
throw "this should never happen";
}
}
100% Unit Test Code Coverage
Not such difficult task for such tiny proposal.This test simply demonstrates the proposal works in all possible meant ways.
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