I am utilizing the javax.scripting with Rhino in this project.
I have a Java method that returns a Java Object (Double, Long, Integer, etc). I want to call that method from javascript and reference the result as a Javascript primitive type. However, javacript recognizes the return type as an Object.
How do I force it to convert to a javascript primitive?
This question is very similar to http://groups.google.com/group/mozilla.dev.tech.js-engine.rhino/browse_thread/thread/2f3d43bb49d5288a/dde79e1aa72e1301
The problem with that is how do I get a reference to the context and the WrapFactory?
Sample Code:
public class data
{
Double value = 1.0d;
public Number get() { return value; }
}
public static void main(String[] args)
{
ScriptEngine engine = new ScriptEngineManager().getEngineByName ("rhino");
data data = new data();
try
{
engine.eval("function test(data) { return data.getD('value1') + 5;};");
System.out.println("Result:" + ((Invocable)engine).invokeFunction("test", data));
}
catch (Exception e)
{
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
Output: Result: 15
I developed this application where you enter a set of mathematical formulas that will be evaluated by the JavaScript engine built into Java 6, which I believe is a port of rhino. The idea was that we would have a set of maps and these maps would contain variables, such as:
I used that approach as some of the expressions for the formulas came from variables that were under my control and that could be invalid JS identifiers. My first approach was to declare a map and add it to the JS engine, but it failed in the same way that it's failing with you - it was interpreting it as a string, and not as a number.
The solution was to parse the formula, figure out what variables are being used by it, and then declare the object inside the JS engine.
Something like this:
And then
MAP["VALUE 1"] + MAP["VALUE 2"]
will return3
, and not12
.There may be a better solution around, but once you go around the initial coding/ parsing, the above will always work. In our case there's a phase where we execute the "declarative" statements, and another phase where we execute the formulas. The JS engine is REALLY fast, so it's not a problem for us.
Use the following as the output in your JavaScript code :
Try the following
Alternatively, you could modify the javascript function to explicitly cast the value to a number: