Reference : http://ejohn.org/blog/simple-class-instantiation/
// makeClass - By John Resig (MIT Licensed)
function makeClass(){
return function(args){
if ( this instanceof arguments.callee ) {
if ( typeof this.init == "function" )
this.init.apply( this, args.callee ? args : arguments );
} else
return new arguments.callee( arguments );
};
}
I was wondering, if there are any ECMAScript 5 compliant way to implement the same functionality. The problem is, accessing arguments.callee
is deprecated in strict mode.
As I understand it
arguments.callee
isn't deprecated in strict mode, in which case you could continue to use it; rather, it has been removed and attempted use will (or is supposed to) throw an exception.The workaround is to use named anonymous functions, if you'll forgive the oxymoron. Really I should say "named function expressions". An example:
The name you provide, in my example
funcExpressionName
is not supposed to be accessible from anywhere except inside the function it applies to, but unfortunately IE has other ideas (as you can see if you Google it).For the example in your question I'm not sure how to handle the
args.callee
since I don't know how that is set by the calling function, but the use ofarguments.callee
would be replaced as per my example.The above idea given by nnnnnn is quite good. And in order to avoid IE issues I suggest the following solution.
Note how we avoid reference to
args.callee
in the// do something
part by using an internal flag.John Resig's original code fails with a parameterless constructor.
But it can be repaired using the following line