职业网络成瘾者 • 游戏爱好者 • 技术创造者
职业网络成瘾者 • 游戏爱好者 • 技术创造者

使用 JavaScript Object.defineProperty 创建 getter 和设置

由于 JavaScript 中的 Object.defineProperty,不再需要 getter 和 setter 函数!
为了方便您使用,本页面由我热情高涨的 AI 实习生从英文翻译而来。他们仍在学习中,因此可能存在一些错误。为了获得最准确的信息,请参考英文版本。
博客 使用 JavaScript Object.defineProperty 创建 getter 和设置

请注意,这篇博文发布于2013年4月,因此根据您阅读的时间,某些部分可能已经过时。很遗憾,我无法始终保持这些文章的完全更新,以确保信息的准确性。

    Coming from 15 years of Java development, writing (probably thousands of) traditional setters and getters methods in various Java classes has been so deeply rooted in my backbone.
    /* * A Java class with traditional setters and getters */ public class Person { private String name; public void setName(final String name) { this.name = name; } public String getName() { return name; } }
    As a developer you write this because you want to maintain data encapsulation, meaning the only way to get the Person's name is through the public getName method. I could have made the name variable public directly as well, like this:
    /* * A Java class with only public variables */ public class Person { public String name; }
    However, by doing this it would not be possible to add extra functionality when someone retrieves the name, such as the returned name should be "John Doe" if no name has been set:
    /* * A Java class with extra functionality in the getter */ public class Person { private String name; public String getName() { return name == null ? "John Doe" : name; } }
    In JavaScript you could do the same thing (simple example, not using the prototype object):
    /* * A simple JavaScript example */ var Person = function() { var name; this.getName = function() { return this.name ? this.name : "John Doe"; } }; var someone = new Person(); console.log( someone.getName() );
    However, the problem (in my opinion) with getters and setters functions is the increased boilerplate code. Everywhere you constantly need to write:
    var name = person.getName();
    instead of directly and maybe more readable:
    var name = person.name;
    Now you maybe ask yourself, won't we have the same problem in JavaScript, like in Java, if we would like the "John Doe" functionality? Actually no - and this is thanks to the Object.defineProperty function in the JavaScript language.
    With Object.defineProperty you can define a property on an object and even define the functionality behind it when the property is read or assigned. Here is an example:
    /* * A JavaScript example using Object.defineProperty */ var Person = function() { }; Object.defineProperty(Person.prototype, "name", { get: function() { return this._name ? this._name : "John Doe"; } }); var someone = new Person(); console.log( someone.name );
    Please note that in the example above, I add the name property on the prototype object and not directly on the Person object (to increase performance).
    In my opinion this is really simple and very elegant. You decrease boilerplate code throughout your whole solution, but still achieve data data encapsulation - and that's very cool :-)

    作者:Special Agent Squeaky。首次发布于2013年4月1日。最后更新于2013年4月1日。

    📺 快来看看 Squeaky 的最新视频!

    如何为您的直播添加简单的实时字幕