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What is the origin of the term reflection? It seems more like introspection. Why isn't it called that?

Introspection: A looking inward; specifically, the act or process of self-examination.

Reflection:

  1. the act of reflecting or the state of being reflected.
  2. an image; representation; counterpart
  3. a fixing of the thoughts on something; careful consideration
  4. a thought occurring in consideration or meditation.
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actually this is an interesting question. i'm not sure anymore i see any difference :p – Johannes Schaub - litb Dec 9 '08 at 2:27
Added definition, if you don't like you can remove it. – Simucal Dec 9 '08 at 2:39

3 Answers

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Reflection comes from the idea of "self-examination, self-modification, and self-replication", reflecting on one's self for the purpose of change. In programming you use reflection to examine the structure of the program itself in the context of using it instead of just examining it. What you get back is a representation of the program that you can use to modify it, rather than the data on which it operates.

More information can be found at the wikipedia article..

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You didn't answer his question at all. Introspection: A looking inward; specifically, the act or process of self-examination. – Simucal Dec 9 '08 at 2:33
@Simucal, sorry I wasn't more clear. I've edited the answer to specify that it is examination with the intent of action. – tvanfosson Dec 9 '08 at 2:39
He did. He's stating that the term reflection is used according to the program's ability to reflect upon changes by modifying itself. – kRON Dec 9 '08 at 2:40
@kRON, my initial answer wasn't as specific. – tvanfosson Dec 9 '08 at 2:43
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There is an interesting answer on the french wikipedia article for Reflection (here)

Reflection can be decomposed in two parts:

  • introspection: a program can examinate itself.
  • intercession: a program can modify it state/meaning.

So reflection is a 'stronger' property than introspection. And that why you say type introspection for the ability to know types at runtime (and changing them is another action: conversion/casting).

EDIT: actually I just realized the first answer was saying exactly that ^^. Time to unplug myself...

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+1: I think yours is clearer – Roger Lipscombe Apr 30 at 15:19
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There is another concept called type introspection that refers to the ability to determine the type of an object at runtime.

edit: I realize your question was intended to be language-agnostic, but in Java, reflection is used to identify what members an object has, whereas introspection allows you to identify which JavaBeans properties an object has, which is why the introspection class is in the java.beans package. I'm not sure what the exact difference between the terms would be in other languages, though,

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