2

I want to create a symbol equal to that of a private MethodMirror's simplename. However, Symbol's documentation states the argument of new Symbol must be a valid public identifier. If I try and create a const Symbol('_privateIdentifier') dart editor informs me that evaluation of this constant expression will throw an exception - though the program runs fine, and I am able to use it without any issues.

void main(){
  //error flagged in dart editor, though runs fine.
  const s = const Symbol('_s');
  print(s); //Symbol("_s");
}

It seems the mirror system uses symbols.

import 'dart:mirrors';
class ClassA{
  _privateMethod(){}
}

void main(){
  var classMirror = reflect(new ClassA()).type;
  classMirror.declarations.keys.forEach(print);
  //Symbol("_privateMethod"), Symbol("ClassA")
}

Is the documentation/error flagging in dart editor a legacy bug due to an outdated dart analyzer? Or are there plans to enforce this public requirement in future? Is there another way to create a unique identifying symbol that will be minified to the same symbol as the declaration's simple name

2 Answers 2

3

If it doesn't throw then the VM has a bug in the const Symbol constructor.

The problem is that "_s" does not identify a private variable without also saying which library it belongs to. The symbol constructor has a second argument taking a LibraryMirror for that reason, and passing in a private name without also passing in a mirror should throw. That's hard to do in a const constructor without side-stepping the requirements of a const constructor (no executing code!), which is likely why the VM doesn't handle it. It needs to be special-cased at the compiler level.

You will also find that const Symbol('_s') is not the same as #_s. The latter creates a private symbol for the current library, the former (if it runs) creates a non-private symbol with the name '_s', which is not really useful. For example print(identical(#_s, const Symbol('_s'))); prints false.

2
  • Is it possible to have a symbol literal that is identical to a top-level setter-method? From what I understand, setter symbols always end in "=", but it looks like #x= gets tokenized into [#x, =].
    – DomJack
    Mar 19, 2015 at 1:54
  • A setter Symbol can't be created using a symbol literal, but it can be created using const Symbol("x="). That's issue dartbug.com/13640. It makes it somewhat harder to create a private setter symbol, and if it doesn't have to be a constant, the easiest way is likely to create an object with a noSuchMethod that leaks the Invocation.memberName symbol.
    – lrn
    Mar 19, 2015 at 13:28
1

The To get hold of the symbol I think you would need to get it from the object. e.g.

  reflect(thing).type.declarations.keys.firstWhere(
    (x) => MirrorSystem.getName(x) == "_privateThingIWant");

Your Answer

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

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