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In porting a C# project to Java that uses JavaScript for user scripts, there's a class that has an overloaded method:

public class TreeNode {
    public TreeNode GetChild(int index) { ... }
    public TreeNode GetChild(String childName) { ... }
    public TreeNode GetChild(String targetAttributeName, String targetAttributeValue) { ... }
    ...
}

Using Rhino, I can bridge this object between Java and JavaScript with:

ScriptableObject.putProperty(scope, "TreeNode", Context.javaToJS(new TreeNode(), scope));

This works great for scripts that simply make calls to the functions (and all the overloaded functions get resolved to the correct type correctly). However, the C# application also indexes into the TreeNode. For example, a JavaScript user function is:

function NumericButtonClick() {
    screen = TreeNode.FindNodeById("Screen");
    screen["Text"] = screen["Text"] + Source["Text"];
}

Running this JavaScript code results in the expected Exception in thread "AWT-EventQueue-0" org.mozilla.javascript.EvaluatorException: Java class "TreeNode" has no public instance field or method named "Text".


To fix this, Rhino supports this by allowing you implement the Scriptable interface (or extend the ScriptableObject which contains a bunch of common boilerplate code). After doing that, the binding seemingly disappears:

Exception in thread "AWT-EventQueue-0" org.mozilla.javascript.EcmaError: TypeError: Cannot find default value for object.

Debugging the code, the specific interaction is that Rhino makes four calls to the get() method of Scriptable:

get(name = "FindNodeByID")
get(name = "__noSuckMethod__")
get(name = "toString")
get(name = "valueOf")

To fix this, we can create specific FunctionObject objects to let Rhino know FindNodeByID is a function to some piece of Java code. (While I've tried doing it manually, just using Scriptable.defineFunctionProperties does this automatically in a lot less code.) This works well until we reach the overloaded GetChild functions, when we get this exception:

org.mozilla.javascript.EvaluatorException: Method "GetChild" occurs multiple times in class "TreeNode".

Alternatively, ScriptableObject.defineClass(scope, TreeNode.class) will map jsFunction_* functions into JaavScript. However, this generates the same sort of error:

org.mozilla.javascript.EvaluatorException: Invalid method "jsFunction_GetChild": name "GetChild" is already in use.

Finally, I looked at adding logic inside the get() to try and pick which FunctionObject we want and return in to Rhino. However, you're not provided any parametrization of the function or any way to look forward except in a very hacky, cumbersome way.


Am I missing something? Is there any way to both index into a mapped Java object in Rhino and have overloaded Java functions? Rhino clearly supports them both, and surely supports them together, but it doesn't seem obvious how to do it.

Thanks for any ideas!

1 Answer 1

1

I had to do something similar and came across this question while I was trying to figure out how to do it.

There is a solution provided for variable argument methods using the ScriptableObject.defineClass/jsFunction_ approach you mention in your question. It is demonstrated in the Foo.java example included with the rhino distribution as:

public static Object jsFunction_varargs(Context cx, Scriptable thisObj, Object[] args, Function funObj)

Note that the method signature has match the above, so it must be static, so you would have:

public static Object jsFunction_GetChild(Context cx, Scriptable thisObj, Object[] args, Function funObj)

In the body of jsFunction_GetChild, you'll have to inspect args to decide which version of GetChild to call. In my case, I have a variable number of args so I was able to just check args.length. In your case, it looks like you'll have to check the types. Then, inside your switching logic you can cast the thisObj parameter to the type of your class (since your method has to be static, you need to use the passed in reference to make the call) in order to call and return the value from the right GetChild.

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