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How do I emulate PHP-style __get() and __set() magic getter/setters in JavaScript? A lot of people say that this is currently impossible. I am almost certain that it is possible because projects like nowjs (http://nowjs.com) do something like this.

I know that you can utilize get and set, but these don't work when you're not sure what the property name will be. For example, what if you wanted an event handler to execute when a new property is created?

Example of what I'd want to do:

var obj = {};
notify(obj, function(key, value) {
   //key is now the name of the property being set.
   //value is the value of the property about to be set
   console.log("setting " + key + " to " + value);
});
obj.foo = 2; //prints "setting foo to 2"
obj.bar = {a: 2}; //prints "setting bar to [Object]"
//Notice that notify() worked even though 'foo' and 'bar' weren't even defined yet!

(The question is similar to the following questions:

)

EDIT: It looks like this feature is called "dynamic proxies" and should appear in the ECMAScript "Harmony" standard (probably ES6). You can read more here. A new 'Proxy' Object is introduced with a couple methods (I.e. Create() and createFunction() ).

One could do this:

//Constructing an object proxy (proto is optional)
var proxy = Proxy.create(handler, proto);
proxy.foo = 2; //Triggers 'set' function in the handler (read about it)

Bottom line here: it doesn't work in most browsers, but an implementation is available for Node.js: node-proxy.

2
  • 1
    This feature called proxies is part of ECMAScript 6 not 5.
    – Raynos
    Aug 8, 2011 at 18:07
  • Good catch. Revised my post. Thanks!
    – BMiner
    Aug 8, 2011 at 19:31

3 Answers 3

13

Looking through the nowjs source code, I believe they do this by continuously monitoring the now object and pushing changes between client and server whenever they are detected. I admit I haven't fully grokked their code yet, however.

In a browser, this would be done with some fun setInterval hacks.

EDIT: yes, that is indeed what they do: line 368 of the client now.js. They do some more tricks so that once a new property is detected, future access to it is caught by getters and setters, but those modifications are only made every 1000 ms in a setTimeout.

Another piece of evidence that this is impossible in current JavaScript is that the proxies proposal for ECMAScript Harmony is designed explicitly to enable such scenarios, implying very strongly that they can't be done currently. Recent Mozilla browsers have a prototype proxies implementation, if perhaps that's enough. And apparently V8 is working to add support, which could be enough depending on what version of V8 Node is using these days.

EDIT2: oh cool, on the server side apparently nowjs does use proxies! Which likely means they are mature enough in Node for your usage. See what they do at https://github.com/Flotype/now/blob/master/lib/proxy.js. Or just do var Proxy = require("nodejs-proxy") and hope they follow the spec so you can take advantage of the documentation from MDC and elsewhere.

2
  • Alright... I can understand client-side hacks, especially b/c of browser compatibility issues. What about server-side? Like, on Node.JS? Do you think it's possible to do something there?
    – BMiner
    Aug 8, 2011 at 17:06
  • 2
    I actually just edited my post with my findings there as you were commenting :)
    – Domenic
    Aug 8, 2011 at 17:07
2

In Firefox, you can use Object.watch. If you look at this thread, Object.watch() for all browsers?, there's an example of using it something like it in all browsers.

Ooops, I just realized you want to watch all properties, not a specific property... The solution above is to watch a specific property.

0

Perhaps this post would help...? That is however, only for specific properties and Gecko based browsers... If you need support for other browsers, its buggy, but you could look into the onpropertychange. Here's the MSDN Page. Hope that helps a bit...

1
  • Thanks for your help. onpropertychange looks like it's only for DOM Objects. This would need to work for plain-old raw JS Objects.
    – BMiner
    Aug 8, 2011 at 17:07

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