14

Is it possible to call a function in AS3 using a string value as the function name e.g.

var functionName:String = "getDetails";

var instance1:MyObject = new MyObject();

instance1.functionName(); // I know this is so wrong, but it gets the point accross:)

UPDATE

The answer from @Taskinoor on accessing a function is correct:

instance1[functionName]();

And to access a property we would use:

instance1[propertyName]
0

3 Answers 3

23
instance1[functionName]();

Check this for some details.

2
  • Nice one, was difficult to google for an answer, this is what I was after.
    – Drenai
    Dec 20, 2010 at 12:02
  • 7
    Just to piggyback on this, you can ask the instance if it has a function or var using the in keyword: if(functionName in instance1) Dec 20, 2010 at 13:05
2

You may use function.apply() or function.call() methods instead in the case when you dont know whether object has such method for instance.

var functionName:String = "getDetails";
var instance1:MyObject = new MyObject();
var function:Function = instance1[functionName]
if (function)
    function.call(instance1, yourArguments)
2
  • As a side note, the advantage here is that apply() allows you to pass the parameters in an array instead of specifying them inline.
    – Luis
    Jun 17, 2014 at 16:03
  • @Luis: See my answer below. You can still specify them inline by passing the ...args. You just have to make sure that the switch can handle the length of arguments. Jan 7, 2015 at 17:32
1

I have created the following wrappers for calling a function. You can call it by its name or by the actual function. I tried to make these as error-prone as possible.

The following function converts a function name to the corresponding function given the scope.

public static function parseFunc(func:*, scope:Object):Function {
    if (func is String && scope && scope.hasOwnProperty(funcName)) {
        func = scope[func] as Function;
    }
    return func is Function ? func : null;
}

Call

Signature: call(func:*,scope:Object,...args):*

public static function call(func:*, scope:Object, ...args):* {
    func = parseFunc(func, scope);
    if (func) {
        switch (args.length) {
            case 0:
                return func.call(scope);
            case 1:
                return func.call(scope, args[0]);
            case 2:
                return func.call(scope, args[0], args[1]);
            case 3:
                return func.call(scope, args[0], args[1], args[2]);
            // Continue...
        }
    }
    return null;
}

Apply

Signature: apply(func:*,scope:Object,argArray:*=null):*

public static function apply(func:*, scope:Object, argArray:*=null):* {
    func = parseFunc(func, scope);
    return func != null ? func.apply(scope, argArray) : null;
}

Notes

Call

The switch is needed, because both ...args and arguments.slice(2) are Arrays. You need to call Function.call() with variable arguments.

Apply

The built-in function (apply(thisArg:*, argArray:*):*) uses a non-typed argument for the argArray. I am just piggy-backing off of this.

2
  • Also, should the apply() argsArray parameter not be typed to Array?
    – Drenai
    Jan 8, 2015 at 16:18
  • I added a notes section to answer some of your questions. Jan 8, 2015 at 16:27

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