Firstly I came to solution with arguments.callee
, but it was awful.
I expected it to break in global strict mode, but seems like it works even there.
class Smth extends Function {
constructor (x) {
super('return arguments.callee.x');
this.x = x;
}
}
(new Smth(90))()
It was a bad way because of using arguments.callee
, passing the code as a string and forcing its execution in non-strict mode. But than idea to override apply
appeared.
var global = (1,eval)("this");
class Smth extends Function {
constructor(x) {
super('return arguments.callee.apply(this, arguments)');
this.x = x;
}
apply(me, [y]) {
me = me !== global && me || this;
return me.x + y;
}
}
And the test, showing I'm able to run this as function in different ways:
var f = new Smth(100);
[
f instanceof Smth,
f(1),
f.call(f, 2),
f.apply(f, [3]),
f.call(null, 4),
f.apply(null, [5]),
Function.prototype.apply.call(f, f, [6]),
Function.prototype.apply.call(f, null, [7]),
f.bind(f)(8),
f.bind(null)(9),
(new Smth(200)).call(new Smth(300), 1),
(new Smth(200)).apply(new Smth(300), [2]),
isNaN(f.apply(window, [1])) === isNaN(f.call(window, 1)),
isNaN(f.apply(window, [1])) === isNaN(Function.prototype.apply.call(f, window, [1])),
] == "true,101,102,103,104,105,106,107,108,109,301,302,true,true"
Version with
super('return arguments.callee.apply(arguments.callee, arguments)');
in fact contains bind
functionality:
(new Smth(200)).call(new Smth(300), 1) === 201
Version with
super('return arguments.callee.apply(this===(1,eval)("this") ? null : this, arguments)');
...
me = me || this;
makes call
and apply
on window
inconsistent:
isNaN(f.apply(window, [1])) === isNaN(f.call(window, 1)),
isNaN(f.apply(window, [1])) === isNaN(Function.prototype.apply.call(f, window, [1])),
so the check should be moved into apply
:
super('return arguments.callee.apply(this, arguments)');
...
me = me !== global && me || this;
super(x)
(i.e. pass it along toFunction
)? Not sure ifFunction
can actually be extended though.Error
, among others.Function
is simply a function constructor. The implementation of the function has to be passed to the constructor. If you don't wantSmth
to accept an implementation, you have to provide it in the constructor, i.e.super('function implementation here')
.Function
constructor (runtime) which is very different from a function expression (syntax).