Reputation: 53491
Right now the library can translate this operation
Select * from List where name = k% order by desc
to
List.filter(function(x) { return x.first_char() == 'k' }).sort().reverse());
Whats the best hack to remove the () so that the developer can write statements like:
List.filter(fn(x) { return x.first_char == 'k' }).sort.reverse;
Naive approach:
maxfn = function() {this[0]..}; Array.prototype.max = maxfn();
But with this approach I can't access 'this'.
I wanted to add a syntactic sugar for
new Array("1","2","3")
to something like :)(suggestions needed)
_("1","2" ,"3")
like we have in scheme where list -> '
I tried to clone the arguments but failed.
Thanks.
Upvotes: 1
Views: 474
Reputation: 1577
I'll try to answer one by one: 1) Why would you want to remove parenthesis from a functon call? 2) If the "naive" approach is failing it's probably because you are calling the maxFn and assigning the results to Array.prototype.max. It should be like this:
maxfn = function() {this[0]..}; Array.prototype.max = maxfn;
3) RoBorg is correct, just use literal notation to construct arrays on the fly.
Array.prototype.max = function(evaluator) {
var max, i = 1; len = this.length;
if (len > 0) max = this[0];
for (; i < len; i++) {
if (evaluator) {
max = evaluator(max, this[i]);
}
else if(max < this[i]) {
max = this[i];
}
}
return max;
};
var a = [1, 3, 4, 5, 6];
alert(a.max());
var b = ["Arnold", "Billy", "Caesar"];
alert(b.max());
var c = ["Arnold", new Date(), 99, true];
alert(c.max());
var d = [1, 3, 4, 5, 6];
alert(d.max(function (max, val) { return max < val ? val : max }));
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 536389
Whats the best hack to remove the ()
Property getters/setters in JavaScript. Unfortunately it's a relatively new JavaScript feature that won't work on IE6/7 (as well as various other older browsers), so it's not really ready for prime-time yet (despite the intro of the linked article).
You could do this particular example by making a JavaScript object that wrapped a String and shadowed all String's methods, then add a static ‘first_char’ property set to the String's first character on initialisation. But it's really not worth it.
new Array("1","2","3")
to something like :)(suggestions needed)
_("1","2" ,"3")
Well that's simple enough:
function _(/* items */) {
var a= new Array();
for (var i= 0; i<arguments.length; i++)
a[i]= arguments[i];
return a;
}
There's no point in doing it nowadays, though, since the array literal syntax:
['1', '2', '3']
has been available since JavaScript 1.1-1.2 era and is available in every browser today. (It predates JSON by many, many years.)
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 19334
You can use JSON notation as suggested by RoBorg, if you control the list... However, there's no cross-browser way to treat a property as a method. Note: spidermonkey (firefox) does support using a getter (get method for a property).
Upvotes: 1