Narrowing assignments and class tests: Difference between revisions

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extension class.
extension class.
The <code>(mammal)</code> indicates selection of a member of a base class.
The <code>(mammal)</code> indicates selection of a member of a base class.
 
==Using the Is Instance Of operator==
==Using the Is Instance Of operator==
You might want to do narrowing assignments on the basis of the
You might want to do narrowing assignments on the basis of the
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<li>[[Dynamic dispatch]]
<li>[[Dynamic dispatch]]
<li>[[Enhancement methods]]
<li>[[Enhancement methods]]
<li>[[Janus SOAP ULI essentials]]
<li>[[Object oriented programming in SOUL]]
</ul>
</ul>




[[Category:Overviews]]
[[Category:Overviews]]
[[Category:Janus SOAP ULI topics]]
[[Category:SOUL object-oriented programming topics]]

Latest revision as of 13:12, 22 January 2023

As discussed in "Polymorphism", Sirius Mods Version 6.9 introduced class test and narrowing assignment capabilities to the Janus SOAP ULI. As stated in that discussion, class tests and narrowing assignments should not be done lightly and, in fact, should be avoided as much as possible. For this reason, by default, class tests and narrowing assignments are not allowed for any class.

If class tests or narrowing assignments are unavoidable for a class, however, an Allow Narrow clause must be placed in the Public block of that base class. For example, the Mammal class could have the following:

class mammal public allow narrow variable weight is float variable name is string len 32 variable home is string len 32 ... end public end class

Then, if you have a class Marsupial that extends the Mammal class, you could do something like the following:

%pouchy is object marsupial %furry is object mammal ... if %furry:name = 'Skippy' then %pouchy = %furry:(marsupial) end if

In this example, if earlier lines in the program did not make %furry actually reference a Marsupial object, and it simply referenced a simple Mammal object or, perhaps, some other extension of class Mammal (say object Feline), the assignment of %furry to %pouchy would fail and the request would be cancelled.

Working with a pseudo-method

As shown in the preceding example, narrowing assignment cannot be done by a simple assignment of object variables (%furry to %pouchy, above). It has to be indicated by a pseudo-method consisting of the target class name in parentheses. The term pseudo-method is used because no actual code is executed in the (marsupial) operation and no transformation of the input object is performed — if %furry references a marsupial, the operation would succeed, otherwise it would fail. The narrowing pseudo-method will always fail if the source object is null.

With this syntax, you can string member names to a narrowing assignment pseudo-method. For example, if the Marsupial class in the above example had a PouchSize member, you can do something like this:

if %furry:name = 'Skippy' then print %furry:(marsupial):pouchSize end if

You can also pass a narrowing assignment pseudo-method output as a method parameter:

%zoo:addMarsupial(%furry:(marsupial))

You can even do something as silly as this:

print %furry:(marsupial):(mammal)weight

This (marsupial) does a narrowing assignment of %furry to an internal work variable. Then, the (mammal)weight accesses the Mammal base class member Weight via that variable. Of course, the above is identical to:

print %furry:weight

with the exception that the silly example would cancel the request if %furry did not reference a marsupial. It is worth emphasizing that the (marsupial) and the (mammal) in the above example serve two very different functions. The (marsupial) indicates a narrowing assignment to an extension class. The (mammal) indicates selection of a member of a base class.

Using the Is Instance Of operator

You might want to do narrowing assignments on the basis of the class of the object pointed to by an object variable. In the above example, %furry is declared as being a Mammal object but, via polymorphism, can be pointing at an object of some extension class, including, of course, class Marsupial. You can use the Is Instance Of keywords to test whether the underlying object referenced by an object variable is of a specific class.

The following is an example using Is Instance Of:

%pouchy is object marsupial %furry is object mammal ... if %furry is instance of marsupial then %pouchy = %furry:(marsupial) end if

In fact, you can perform class-specific processing based on such tests:

%furry is object mammal ... if %furry is instance of marsupial then %furry:home = 'Australia' end if

This kind of code is strongly discouraged, and it is a formula for long-term code maintainability problems. What will happen to the above code, for example, when used on an opossum, which is one of the few marsupials that doesn't necessarily live in Australia?

The Is Instance Of keywords must be followed by the name of a class that is an extension class of the type of the object variable that precedes the keywords.
Note: No system classes currently are Allow Narrow classes.

See also