Reputation: 27311
I've been using Object.observe()
as part of a nw.js project that is now transitioning from nw.js v.0.12.3 to latest.
I have code like this:
..(myclass)..
data: { a:0, b:42 },
setupHandlers: function () {
Object.observe(this.data, changes => this.draw());
},
draw: function () { .. }
My initial conversion looks like:
data: {_a: 0, _b: 42},
get a() { return this._a; }
set a(val) { this.data._a = val; this.draw(); }
get b() { return this._b; }
set b(val) { this.data._b = val; this.draw(); }
and then change every place that wrote to data (myobj.data.a = 1
) to instead write to the object (myobj.a = 1
), thus using the setter.
It's a very labor-intensive conversion, is there an easier way?
Upvotes: 0
Views: 29
Reputation: 27311
We ended up using Proxy
to catch attribute assignment:
const shallow_observer = function (obj, fn) {
return new Proxy(obj, {
set(target, name, val) {
target[name] = val;
if (fn) fn(target, name, val);
return true;
}
});
};
which allowed us to do:
data: { a:0, b:42 },
setupHandlers: function () {
this.data = shallow_observer(this.data, (data, field, value) => this.draw());
},
draw: function () { .. }
We have a deep_observer
function too (which is much more complex), that detects changes in a nested data structure, but the shallow_observer
was sufficient for all our use-cases.
Upvotes: 1