ScriptableObject
nsIScriptableObject
A need has been identified for an XPCOM interface to support general purpose "scriptable objects". "scriptable objects" are objects with methods and properties that change at runtime. For this reason, the use of normal XPCOM interfaces is not suitable.
nsIScriptableObject is designed to solve this problem. It is an interface that allows arbitrary property references to be made on an object. The operations allowed are:
- Call a method on an object (including calling the object itself - ie, an nsIScriptableObject is itself 'callable')
- Set and get the value of a property on the object.
- Create or delete properties on the object.
- Enumerate the properties of the object.
Not all implementations of the interface will support all operations, but the interface itself must be able to describe the above semantics.
Script languages may provide special support for this interface. For example, given an nsIScriptableObject object, script languages should be able to dynamically translate "x = object.foo" into the necessary IScriptable calls to lookup and fetch the attribute 'foo' on the interface.
nsIScriptableObject design
We will shamelessly borrow the MS COM IDispatchEx interface as a model. IDispatchEx is designed for this purpose and provides a number of enhancements to the older IDispatch interfaces.
It is worth discussing the role of IDispatchEx with MS's JScript and IE. JScript has native support for working with IDispatchEx as a namespace - ie, property references, assignments and method calls etc make IDispatchEx calls. GetNameSpaceParent is used to manage scoping. IE provides the IDispatch implementation. As IE initializes script engines (ie, script languages), it provides an IDispatchEx implementation for each "named object" - such as 'window'. As all script languages share this common IDispatch instance, all languages work with the same namespace - a property set in one language is reflected in another.
A couple of excellent resources on this topic are at http://blogs.msdn.com/ericlippert/archive/2004/10/07/239289.aspx and http://blogs.msdn.com/ericlippert/archive/2004/09/20/231852.aspx
More information can be found at the new nsIScriptable interface description.
Language Helpers
Use Cases
existing dialog widget
Consider the dialog widget, which allows you to have an "ondialogaccept" event handler. This widget is implemented in JS. See dialog.xul, http://lxr.mozilla.org/seamonkey/source/xpfe/global/resources/content/bindings/dialog.xml#297
In summary, a dialog widget's "ondialogaccept" handler is called using the following paraphrased code:
var handler = this.getAttribute("ondialog"+aDlgType); var fn = new Function("event", handler); var returned = fn(event);
The challenge is to allow this JS implemented widget to work in a language agnostic fashion - so that if the dialog node has a different script-type set, the JS implementation can call the other language.
This would be achieved by:
// A new helper xpcom service for cross-language work. [scriptable, uuid(...)] interface nsIDOMScriptObjectHelper: nsISupports { // Compile a function using the specified language. Returns // an nsIScriptableObject that can be directly called (ie, by passing // DISPID_DEFAULT). |glob| must be the global window in // which the returned function will execute when called. // Generally you pass |this|. nsIScriptableObject compileFunction(in nsISupports glob, in PRUint32 langID, in DOMString aCode, [array] in DOMString argNames); // Execute arbitrary code. void execute(PRUint32 langID, in DOMString aCode); // Takes a script-type ID (which is presumably the ID for // a language other than the one being executed), and nsISupports // |glob| (which must be the global object for the currently // executing language) and returns an nsIScriptableObject, which is // the global scope object for the requested language. nsIScriptableObject getLanguageGlobal(in PRUint32 aRequestedLanguage, in nsISupports glob); };
And the JS code implementing dialog.xml would change to:
var lang_id = node.scriptTypeID; // new attribute on nsIDOMNSEventTarget. var s = components.classes["@mozilla.org/scriptobjecthelper"].getService(); var func = s.compileFunction(this, lang_id, handler, "event"); // |func| is an nsIScriptableObject -- call it. var returned = func(event);
Contrived dialog widget
Below is a contrived example that demonstrates getLanguageGlobal. Let's assume the design of the dialog widget was such that it simply assumed a global function called "ondialogaccept" in the window namespace.
For example, let's assume a dialog widget insisted you structure your dialog like:
<script> function ondialogaccept(event) { ... do something .." } </script> <dialog>
This could be implemented now in a JavaScript specific way simply by calling the function 'ondialogaccept' by name, in the assumption a <script> block created such a function.
Assuming nsIScriptableObject, this could be implemented in a language agnostic fashion as follows:
var global = s.getLanguageGlobal(lang_id, window) var func = global.ondialogaccept var ret = func(event)
The first line returns an nsIScriptableObject object. The JS support for this interface would then allow 'namespace.ondialogaccept' to invoke the necessary nsIScriptableObject methods to lookup the attribute. The attribute would be looked up as a simple property reference, and as a function object would be found, |func| would itself be an nsIScriptableObject. |func(event)| would then automatically call nsIScriptableObject::invoke with a DISPID of DISPID_DEFAULT.
For the sake of completeness, the above could also obviously be written as:
var global = s.getLanguageGlobal(lang_id, window) var ret = global.ondialogaccept(event)
In this case the use of nsIScriptableObject may be slightly different -- the initial invoke for 'ondialogaccept' may be done as a method call, assuming the language is capable of detecting that situation.