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问题:
Is there any way to determine in Javascript if an object was created using object-literal notation or using a constructor method?
It seems to me that you just access it's parent object, but if the object you are passing in doesn't have a reference to it's parent, I don't think you can tell this, can you?
回答1:
I just came across this question and thread during a sweet hackfest that involved a grail quest for evaluating whether an object was created with {} or new Object() (i still havent figured that out.)
Anyway, I was suprised to find the similarity between the isObjectLiteral() function posted here and my own isObjLiteral() function that I wrote for the Pollen.JS project. I believe this solution was posted prior to my Pollen.JS commit, so - hats off to you! The upside to mine is the length... less then half (when included your set up routine), but both produce the same results.
Take a look:
function isObjLiteral(_obj) {
var _test = _obj;
return ( typeof _obj !== 'object' || _obj === null ?
false :
(
(function () {
while (!false) {
if ( Object.getPrototypeOf( _test = Object.getPrototypeOf(_test) ) === null) {
break;
}
}
return Object.getPrototypeOf(_obj) === _test;
})()
)
);
}
Additionally, some test stuff:
var _cases= {
_objLit : {},
_objNew : new Object(),
_function : new Function(),
_array : new Array(),
_string : new String(),
_image : new Image(),
_bool: true
};
console.dir(_cases);
for ( var _test in _cases ) {
console.group(_test);
console.dir( {
type: typeof _cases[_test],
string: _cases[_test].toString(),
result: isObjLiteral(_cases[_test])
});
console.groupEnd();
}
Or on jsbin.com...
http://jsbin.com/iwuwa
Be sure to open firebug when you get there - debugging to the document is for IE lovers.
回答2:
Edit: I'm interpreting "object literal" as anything created using an object literal or the Object
constructor. This is what John Resig most likely meant.
I have a function that will work even if .constructor
has been tainted or if the object was created in another frame. Note that Object.prototype.toString.call(obj) === "[object Object]"
(as some may believe) will not solve this problem.
function isObjectLiteral(obj) {
if (typeof obj !== "object" || obj === null)
return false;
var hasOwnProp = Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty,
ObjProto = obj;
// get obj's Object constructor's prototype
while (Object.getPrototypeOf(ObjProto = Object.getPrototypeOf(ObjProto)) !== null);
if (!Object.getPrototypeOf.isNative) // workaround if non-native Object.getPrototypeOf
for (var prop in obj)
if (!hasOwnProp.call(obj, prop) && !hasOwnProp.call(ObjProto, prop)) // inherited elsewhere
return false;
return Object.getPrototypeOf(obj) === ObjProto;
};
if (!Object.getPrototypeOf) {
if (typeof ({}).__proto__ === "object") {
Object.getPrototypeOf = function (obj) {
return obj.__proto__;
};
Object.getPrototypeOf.isNative = true;
} else {
Object.getPrototypeOf = function (obj) {
var constructor = obj.constructor,
oldConstructor;
if (Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(obj, "constructor")) {
oldConstructor = constructor;
if (!(delete obj.constructor)) // reset constructor
return null; // can't delete obj.constructor, return null
constructor = obj.constructor; // get real constructor
obj.constructor = oldConstructor; // restore constructor
}
return constructor ? constructor.prototype : null; // needed for IE
};
Object.getPrototypeOf.isNative = false;
}
} else Object.getPrototypeOf.isNative = true;
Here is the HTML for the testcase:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8"/>
<!-- Online here: http://code.eligrey.com/testcases/all/isObjectLiteral.html -->
<title>isObjectLiteral</title>
<style type="text/css">
li { background: green; } li.FAIL { background: red; }
iframe { display: none; }
</style>
</head>
<body>
<ul id="results"></ul>
<script type="text/javascript">
function isObjectLiteral(obj) {
if (typeof obj !== "object" || obj === null)
return false;
var hasOwnProp = Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty,
ObjProto = obj;
// get obj's Object constructor's prototype
while (Object.getPrototypeOf(ObjProto = Object.getPrototypeOf(ObjProto)) !== null);
if (!Object.getPrototypeOf.isNative) // workaround if non-native Object.getPrototypeOf
for (var prop in obj)
if (!hasOwnProp.call(obj, prop) && !hasOwnProp.call(ObjProto, prop)) // inherited elsewhere
return false;
return Object.getPrototypeOf(obj) === ObjProto;
};
if (!Object.getPrototypeOf) {
if (typeof ({}).__proto__ === "object") {
Object.getPrototypeOf = function (obj) {
return obj.__proto__;
};
Object.getPrototypeOf.isNative = true;
} else {
Object.getPrototypeOf = function (obj) {
var constructor = obj.constructor,
oldConstructor;
if (Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(obj, "constructor")) {
oldConstructor = constructor;
if (!(delete obj.constructor)) // reset constructor
return null; // can't delete obj.constructor, return null
constructor = obj.constructor; // get real constructor
obj.constructor = oldConstructor; // restore constructor
}
return constructor ? constructor.prototype : null; // needed for IE
};
Object.getPrototypeOf.isNative = false;
}
} else Object.getPrototypeOf.isNative = true;
// Function serialization is not permitted
// Does not work across all browsers
Function.prototype.toString = function(){};
// The use case that we want to match
log("{}", {}, true);
// Instantiated objects shouldn't be matched
log("new Date", new Date, false);
var fn = function(){};
// Makes the function a little more realistic
// (and harder to detect, incidentally)
fn.prototype = {someMethod: function(){}};
// Functions shouldn't be matched
log("fn", fn, false);
// Again, instantiated objects shouldn't be matched
log("new fn", new fn, false);
var fn2 = function(){};
log("new fn2", new fn2, false);
var fn3 = function(){};
fn3.prototype = {}; // impossible to detect (?) without native Object.getPrototypeOf
log("new fn3 (only passes with native Object.getPrototypeOf)", new fn3, false);
log("null", null, false);
log("undefined", undefined, false);
/* Note:
* The restriction against instantiated functions is
* due to the fact that this method will be used for
* deep-cloning an object. Instantiated objects will
* just have their reference copied over, whereas
* plain objects will need to be completely cloned.
*/
var iframe = document.createElement("iframe");
document.body.appendChild(iframe);
var doc = iframe.contentDocument || iframe.contentWindow.document;
doc.open();
doc.write("<body onload='window.top.iframeDone(Object);'>");
doc.close();
function iframeDone(otherObject){
// Objects from other windows should be matched
log("new otherObject", new otherObject, true);
}
function log(msg, a, b) {
var pass = isObjectLiteral(a) === b ? "PASS" : "FAIL";
document.getElementById("results").innerHTML +=
"<li class='" + pass + "'>" + msg + "</li>";
}
</script>
</body>
</html>
回答3:
It sounds like you are looking for this:
function Foo() {}
var a = {};
var b = new Foo();
console.log(a.constructor == Object); // true
console.log(b.constructor == Object); // false
The constructor property on an object is a pointer to the function that is used to construct it. In the example above b.constructor == Foo
. If the object was created using curly brackets (the array literal notation) or using new Object()
then its constructor property will == Object
.
Update: crescentfresh pointed out that $(document).constructor == Object
rather than being equal to the jQuery constructor, so I did a little more digging. It seems that by using an object literal as the prototype of an object you render the constructor property almost worthless:
function Foo() {}
var obj = new Foo();
obj.constructor == Object; // false
but:
function Foo() {}
Foo.prototype = { objectLiteral: true };
var obj = new Foo();
obj.constructor == Object; // true
There is a very good explanation of this in another answer here, and a more involved explanation here.
I think the other answers are correct and there is not really a way to detect this.
回答4:
An object literal is the notation you use to define an object - which in javascript is always in the form of a name-value pair surrounded by the curly brackets. Once this has been executed there is no way to tell if the object was created by this notation or not (actually, I think that might be an over-simplification, but basically correct). You just have an object. This is one of the great things about js in that there are a lot of short cuts to do things that might be a lot longer to write. In short, the literal notation replaces having to write:
var myobject = new Object();
回答5:
What you want is:
Object.getPrototypeOf(obj) === Object.prototype
This checks that the object is a plain object created with either new Object()
or {...}
and not some subclass of Object
.
回答6:
There is no way to tell the difference between an object built from an object literal, and one built from other means.
It's a bit like asking if you can determine whether a numeric variable was constructed by assigning the value '2' or '3-1';
If you need to do this, you'd have to put some specific signature into your object literal to detect later.
回答7:
I had the same issue, so I decide to go this way:
function isPlainObject(val) {
return val ? val.constructor === {}.constructor : false;
}
// Examples:
isPlainObject({}); // true
isPlainObject([]); // false
isPlainObject(new Human("Erik", 25)); // false
isPlainObject(new Date); // false
isPlainObject(new RegExp); // false
//and so on...