11

I want a function to be able to take in various types. AS3 doesn't support overloading directly... so I can't do the following:

//THIS ISN'T SUPPORTED BY AS3

function someFunction(xx:int, yy:int, someBoolean:Boolean = true){
    //blah blah blah
}
function someFunction(arr:Array, someBoolean:Boolean = true){
    someFunction(arr[0], arr[1], someBoolean);
}

How can I work around it and still have a function that is able to take arguments of various types?

6
  • I am sure you will get your answers, but I am just courious why you would want to use method overloading? I have sometimes gotten to a certain point when that really would have helped to fix a quick problem, but I concider it BAD PRACTICE so I dont do it.
    – Mattias
    Sep 19, 2011 at 6:05
  • I agree with Mattias. W/o native support for overloading, it's bad practice to have a function accepting variable parameters (unless in very, very specific situations which have nothing to do with overloading)
    – Creynders
    Sep 19, 2011 at 7:24
  • 5
    Method overloading is an incredibly handy addition to any language. It would make stuff like Math classes so much easier; no more multPoint(), multScalar() etc, you can just have mult() Sep 19, 2011 at 7:31
  • @divillysausages Cool. Any good examples of that?
    – Mattias
    Sep 19, 2011 at 7:53
  • it's not really supported in as3. the best i've seen is something like zzzzBov's answer: function mult( param:* ):void { if (param is Point) this._multPoint(); else if (param is Number) this._multScalar(); } Sep 19, 2011 at 8:25

2 Answers 2

21

If you just want to be able to accept any type, you can use * to allow any type:

function someFunction( xx:*, yy:*, flag:Boolean = true )
{
  if (xx is Number) {
    ...do stuff...
  } else if (xx is String) {
    ...do stuff...
  } else {
    ...do stuff...
  }
}

If you have a large number of various parameters where order is unimportant, use an options object:

function someFunction( options:Object )
{
  if (options.foo) doFoo();
  if (options.bar) doBar();
  baz = options.baz || 15;
  ...etc...
}

If you have a variable number of parameters, you can use the ... (rest) parameter:

function someFunction( ... args)
{
  switch (args.length)
  {
    case 2:
      arr = args[0];
      someBool = args[1];
      xx = arr[0];
      yy = arr[1];
      break;
    case 3:
      xx = args[0];
      yy = args[1];
      someBool = args[2];
      break;
    default:
      throw ...whatever...
  }
  ...do more stuff...
}

For cases where you need to call a common function to a number of classes, you should specify the interface common to each class:

function foo( bar:IBazable, flag:Boolean )
{
  ...do stuff...
  baz = bar.baz()
  ...do more stuff...
}
1
2

Could just have:

function something(...args):void
{
    trace(args[0], args[1]);
}

This way you can easily loop through your arguments and such too (and even check the argument type):

function something(...args):void
{
    for each(var i:Object in args)
    {
        trace(typeof(i) + ": " + i);
    }
}

something("hello", 4, new Sprite()); // string: hello
                                     // number: 4
                                     // object: [object Sprite]

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.