2

I have a class created using dojo.declare(). Sometimes, I want to add another module (also created with dojo.declare) but when I do, it doesn't seem to become part of the first class.

Here's a simplified example:

 dojo.declare( 'class1',
    null,
    {
        constructor: function()
        {
            console.log( 'class1 constructor' );
            this.inherited(arguments);
        }
    }
);

dojo.declare( 'class2',
    null,
    {
        constructor: function()
        {
            console.log( 'class2 constructor' );
        }
    }
);

dojo.extend( class1, class2 );

var myclass = new class1();

You can see a jsfiddle here: http://jsfiddle.net/jdvRX/

I am aiming to duplicate this functionality:

dojo.declare( 'class2',
    null, 
    {
        _class2_prop: true,
        constructor: function()
        {
            console.log( 'class2 constructor');
        }
    }
);

dojo.declare( 'class1',
    class2, // class2 added as parent/mixin/module type thing
    {
        _class1_prop: true,
        constructor: function()
        {
            console.log( 'class1 constructor');
        }
    }
);

But only sometimes... Basically, I want to add to the second argument of class1's dojo.declare() dynamically. Depending on other factors, class2 may or not be used.

In the real-world version, each class is in a seperate file and loaded with dojo.require().

What am I doing wrong?

Thanks

2 Answers 2

0

dojo.extend receives an object containing the properties to mix in instead of an extra class.

So you have to do

class1.extend({
    f2: function(){ console.log('class2'); }
})

or perhaps

class1.extend( class2.prototype )

I am not sure if you can do the same constructor-inheritance magic from dojo declare though. Perhaps you migh need to change that functionality to another method and/or do the inheritance manually

var oldF = class1.prototype.f
class1.extend({
    f: function(){
        olfF.call(this);
        console.log('more stuff');
    }
});
0

I don't know if this would be enough for your case, but maybie you could assign the class you want to extend your main class to a variable, like this :

dojo.declare( 'class2',
    null,
    {
        _class2_prop: true,
        constructor: function()
        {
            console.log( 'class2 constructor');
        }
    }
);
// set this to whatever class you want to use for extending class1, or to null
var extendedClass = class2; 

dojo.declare( 'class1',
    extendedClass, // class2 added as parent/mixin/module type thing
    {
        _class1_prop: true,
        constructor: function()
        {
            console.log( 'class1 constructor');
        }
    }
);


var myclass = new class1();

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.