I am currently working a plugin with a settings variable that is fairly deep (3-4 levels in some places). Following the generally accepted jQuery Plugin pattern I have implemented a simple way for users to modify settings on the fly using the following notation:
$('#element').plugin('option', 'option_name', 'new_value');
Here is the code similar to what I am using now for the options method.
option: function (option, value) {
if (typeof (option) === 'string') {
if (value === undefined) return settings[option];
if(typeof(value) === 'object')
$.extend(true, settings[option], value);
else
settings[option] = value;
}
return this;
}
Now consider that I have a settings variable like so:
var settings = {
opt: false,
another: {
deep: true
}
};
If I want to change the deep settings I have to use the following notation:
$('#element').plugin('option', 'another', { deep: false });
However, since in practice my settings can be 3-4 levels deep I feel the following notation would be more useful:
$('#element').plugin('option', 'another.deep', false);
However I'm not sure how feasible this is, nor how to go about doing it. As a first attempt I tried to "traverse" to the option in question and set it, but if I set my traversing variable it doesn't set what it references in the original settings variable.
option: function (option, value) {
if (typeof (option) === 'string') {
if (value === undefined) return settings[option];
var levels = option.split('.'),
opt = settings[levels[0]];
for(var i = 1; i < levels.length; ++i)
opt = opt[levels[i]];
if(typeof(value) === 'object')
$.extend(true, opt, value);
else
opt = value;
}
return this;
}
To say that another way: By setting opt after traversing, the setting it actually refers to in the settings variable is unchanged after this code runs.
I apologize for the long question, any help is appreciated. Thanks!
EDIT
As a second attempt I can do it using eval() like so:
option: function (option, value) {
if (typeof (option) === 'string') {
var levels = option.split('.'),
last = levels[levels.length - 1];
levels.length -= 1;
if (value === undefined) return eval('settings.' + levels.join('.'))[last];
if(typeof(value) === 'object')
$.extend(true, eval('settings.' + levels.join('.'))[last], value);
else
eval('settings.' + levels.join('.'))[last] = value;
}
return this;
}
But I really would like to see if anyone can show me a way to not use eval. Since it is a user input string I would rather not run eval() on it because it could be anything. Or let me know if I am being paranoid, and it shouldn't cause a problem at all.