My colleague has been using "new function()" with a lower case "f" to define new objects in JavaScript. It seems to work well in all major browsers and it also seems to be fairly effective at hiding private variables. Here's an example:
var someObj = new function () {
var inner = 'some value';
this.foo = 'blah';
this.get_inner = function () {
return inner;
};
this.set_inner = function (s) {
inner = s;
};
};
As soon as "this" is used, it becomes a public property of someObj. So someObj.foo, someObj.get_inner() and someObj.set_inner() are all available publicly. In addition, set_inner() and get_inner() are privileged methods, so they have access to "inner" through closures.
However, I haven't seen any reference to this technique anywhere. Even Douglas Crockford's JSLint complains about it:
- weird construction. Delete 'new'
We're using this technique in production and it seems to be working well, but I'm a bit anxious about it because it's not documented anywhere. Does anyone know if this is a valid technique?
Question&Answers:
os 与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…