I would like to make an object\'s structure immutable, preventing its properties from being subsequently replaced. The properties need to be readable, however. Is this possi
Okay, so there's been already a couple of answers suggesting you return an object with several getters methods. But you can still replace those methods.
There's this, which is slightly better. You won't be able to replace the object's properties without replacing the function completely. But it's still not exactly what you want.
function Sealed(obj) {
function copy(o){
var n = {};
for(p in o){
n[p] = o[p]
}
return n;
}
var priv = copy(obj);
return function(p) {
return typeof p == 'undefined' ? copy(priv) : priv[p]; // or maybe copy(priv[p])
}
}
var mycar = new Sealed({make:"ford", model:"mustang", color:"black"});
alert( mycar('make') ); // "ford"
alert( mycar().make ); // "ford"
var newcopy = mycar();
newcopy.make = 'volkwagen';
alert( newcopy.make ); // "volkwagen" :(
alert( mycar().make ); // still "ford" :)
alert( mycar('make') ); // still "ford" :)
You can now force a single object property to be frozen instead of freezing the whole object. You can achieve this with Object.defineProperty
and the parameter writable: false
var obj = {
"first": 1,
"second": 2,
"third": 3
};
Object.defineProperty(obj, "first", {
writable: false,
value: 99
});
In this example, obj.first
now has its value locked to 99.
the best thing you can do is hide your properties inside of a closure.
var getMap = function(){
var hidden = "1";
return {
getHidden : function() { return hidden; }
}
}
var f = getMap ();
alert(f.getHidden());
I took a stab at it. In the above code you will need to not just return hidden but copy it into a new object perhaps. maybe you can use jquery's extend to do this for you, so you will be returning a new object, not the reference. This may be completely wrong though =)
Using var
in an object constructor will create a private variable. This is essentially a closure. Then you can create a public function to access/modify it. More information and examples available on Private Members in Javascript by Douglas Crockford.
As mkoryak said, you can create a closure to hide properties
function Car(make, model, color) {
var _make = make, _model = model, _color = color;
this.getMake = function() {
return _make;
}
}
var mycar = new Car("ford", "mustang", "black");
mycar.getMake(); //returns "ford"
mycar._make; //error
ECMAScript 5 will have seal()
and freeze()
, but there's no good way to do this with current JavaScript implementations.
Source.