@stdlib/function-ctor
v0.2.2
Published
Function constructor.
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Function
Function constructor.
Installation
npm install @stdlib/function-ctor
Usage
var Function = require( '@stdlib/function-ctor' );
Function( [...argNames,] body )
Returns a new function object.
var greet = new Function( 'name', 'return "Hello, "+name+"!"' );
var v = greet( 'Jane' );
// returns 'Hello, Jane!'
Argument names must be strings corresponding to valid JavaScript parameters (i.e., a plain identifier, or, in environments supporting such parameters, a rest parameter or destructured parameter, optionally with a default).
Properties
Function.prototype.length
A number representing the number of arguments expected by the function.
var greet = new Function( 'name', 'return "Hello, "+name+"!"' );
var v = greet.length;
// returns 1
Function.prototype.name
Read-only property representing the name of the function.
function greet( name ) {
return 'Hello, '+name+'!';
}
var v = greet.name;
// returns 'greet'
// Functions created with the Function constructor are anonymous:
var fcn = new Function( 'name', 'return "Hello, "+name+"!"' );
v = fcn.name;
// returns 'anonymous'
Function.prototype.prototype
Read-only property representing the prototype of the function.
function greet( name ) {
return 'Hello, '+name+'!';
}
var proto = greet.prototype;
// returns {}
Methods
Function.prototype.apply( thisArg, args )
Calls the specified function with the given this
argument and arguments provided as an array-like object.
function add( x, y ) {
return this.initial + x + y;
}
var ctx = {
'initial': 10
};
var v = add.apply( ctx, [ 1, 2 ] );
// returns 13
Function.prototype.bind( thisArg[, arg1[, arg2[, ...]]] )
Returns a new function which invokes the original function with the given this
value and arguments.
function add( x, y ) {
return x + y;
}
var add1 = add.bind( null, 1 );
var v = add1( 2 );
// returns 3
Function.prototype.call( thisArg[, arg1[, arg2[, ...]]] )
Calls the specified function with the given this
value and arguments.
function add( x, y ) {
return this.initial + x + y;
}
var ctx = {
'initial': 10
};
var v = add.call( ctx, 1, 2 );
// returns 13
Function.prototype.toString()
Returns a string representing the function.
function add( x, y ) {
return x + y;
}
var v = add.toString();
// e.g., returns 'function add( x, y ) {\n return x + y;\n}'
Notes
- In pre-ES2015 environments, only plain identifiers (without defaults) are valid JavaScript parameters.
- Creating
Function
objects with theFunction
constructor is less efficient than declaring a function via a function expression or a function statement. - The
Function
constructor can be invoked without thenew
operator (usingnew
and not usingnew
both return a newFunction
object). - The
Function
constructor creates functions which execute in the global scope. Hence, created functions cannot access variables local to the scope in which functions were created.
Examples
var Function = require( '@stdlib/function-ctor' );
var add = new Function( 'x', 'y', 'return x + y' );
var v = add( 1, 2 );
// returns 3
Notice
This package is part of stdlib, a standard library for JavaScript and Node.js, with an emphasis on numerical and scientific computing. The library provides a collection of robust, high performance libraries for mathematics, statistics, streams, utilities, and more.
For more information on the project, filing bug reports and feature requests, and guidance on how to develop stdlib, see the main project repository.
Community
License
See LICENSE.
Copyright
Copyright © 2016-2024. The Stdlib Authors.