In computer science, reflective programming or reflection is the ability of a process to examine, introspect, and modify its own structure and behavior.[1]
The earliest computers were programmed in their native assembly languages, which were inherently reflective, as these original architectures could be programmed by defining instructions as data and using self-modifying code. As programming moved to compiled higher-level languages such as Algol, Cobol, and Fortran (but also Pascal and C and many other languages), this reflective ability largely disappeared until programming languages with reflection built into their type systems appeared.[citation needed]
Brian Cantwell Smith's 1982 doctoral dissertation[2][3] introduced the notion of computational reflection in procedural programming languages and the notion of the meta-circular interpreter as a component of 3-Lisp.
Reflection helps programmers make generic software libraries to display data, process different formats of data, perform serialization or deserialization of data for communication, or do bundling and unbundling of data for containers or bursts of communication.
Effective use of reflection almost always requires a plan: A design framework, encoding description, object library, a map of a database or entity relations.
Reflection makes a language more suited to network-oriented code. For example, it assists languages such as Java to operate well in networks by enabling libraries for serialization, bundling and varying data formats. Languages without reflection (e.g. C) have to use auxiliary compilers, e.g. for Abstract Syntax Notation, to produce code for serialization and bundling.
Reflection can be used for observing and modifying program execution at runtime. A reflection-oriented program component can monitor the execution of an enclosure of code and can modify itself according to a desired goal related to that enclosure. This is typically accomplished by dynamically assigning program code at runtime.
In object-oriented programming languages such as Java, reflection allows inspection of classes, interfaces, fields and methods at runtime without knowing the names of the interfaces, fields, methods at compile time. It also allows instantiation of new objects and invocation of methods.
Reflection is often used as part of software testing, such as for the runtime creation/instantiation of mock objects.
Reflection is also a key strategy for metaprogramming.
In some object-oriented programming languages, such as C# and Java, reflection can be used to bypass member accessibility rules. For C#-properties this can be achieved by writing directly onto the (usually invisible) backing field of a non-public property. It is also possible to find non-public methods of classes and types and manually invoke them. This works for project-internal files as well as external libraries (.Net-assemblies and Java-archives).
This section does not cite any sources.(January 2008) |
A language supporting reflection provides a number of features available at runtime that would otherwise be difficult to accomplish in a lower-level language. Some of these features are the abilities to:
These features can be implemented in different ways. In MOO, reflection forms a natural part of everyday programming idiom. When verbs (methods) are called, various variables such as verb (the name of the verb being called) and this (the object on which the verb is called) are populated to give the context of the call. Security is typically managed by accessing the caller stack programmatically: Since callers() is a list of the methods by which the current verb was eventually called, performing tests on callers()[0] (the command invoked by the original user) allows the verb to protect itself against unauthorised use.
Compiled languages rely on their runtime system to provide information about the source code. A compiled Objective-C executable, for example, records the names of all methods in a block of the executable, providing a table to correspond these with the underlying methods (or selectors for these methods) compiled into the program. In a compiled language that supports runtime creation of functions, such as Common Lisp, the runtime environment must include a compiler or an interpreter.
Reflection can be implemented for languages not having built-in reflection facilities by using a program transformation system to define automated source-code changes.
The following code snippets create an instance foo
of class Foo
and invoke its method PrintHello
. For each programming language, normal and reflection-based call sequences are shown.
The following is an example in C#:
// Without reflection
Foo foo = new Foo();
foo.PrintHello();
// With reflection
Object foo = Activator.CreateInstance("complete.classpath.and.Foo");
MethodInfo method = foo.GetType().GetMethod("PrintHello");
method.Invoke(foo, null);
This Delphi/Object Pascal example assumes that a TFoo class has been declared in a unit called Unit1:
uses RTTI, Unit1;
procedure WithoutReflection;
var
Foo: TFoo;
begin
Foo := TFoo.Create;
try
Foo.Hello;
finally
Foo.Free;
end;
end;
procedure WithReflection;
var
RttiContext: TRttiContext;
RttiType: TRttiInstanceType;
Foo: TObject;
begin
RttiType := RttiContext.FindType('Unit1.TFoo') as TRttiInstanceType;
Foo := RttiType.GetMethod('Create').Invoke(RttiType.MetaclassType, []).AsObject;
try
RttiType.GetMethod('Hello').Invoke(Foo, []);
finally
Foo.Free;
end;
end;
The following is an example in eC:
// Without reflection
Foo foo { };
foo.hello();
// With reflection
Class fooClass = eSystem_FindClass(__thisModule, "Foo");
Instance foo = eInstance_New(fooClass);
Method m = eClass_FindMethod(fooClass, "hello", fooClass.module);
((void (*)())(void *)m.function)(foo);
The following is an example in Go:
import "reflect"
// Without reflection
f := Foo{}
f.Hello()
// With reflection
fT := reflect.TypeOf(Foo{})
fV := reflect.New(fT)
m := fV.MethodByName("Hello")
if m.IsValid() {
m.Call(nil)
}
The following is an example in Java:
import java.lang.reflect.Method;
// Without reflection
Foo foo = new Foo();
foo.hello();
// With reflection
try {
Object foo = Foo.class.newInstance();
Method m = foo.getClass().getDeclaredMethod("hello", new Class<?>[0]);
m.invoke(foo);
} catch (ReflectiveOperationException ignored) {}
The following is an example in JavaScript:
// Without reflection
const foo = new Foo()
foo.hello()
// With reflection
const foo = Reflect.construct(Foo)
const hello = Reflect.get(foo, 'hello')
Reflect.apply(hello, foo, [])
// With eval
eval('new Foo().hello()')
The following is an example in Julia (programming language):
julia> struct Point
x::Int
y
end
# Inspection with reflection
julia> fieldnames(Point)
(:x, :y)
julia> fieldtypes(Point)
(Int64, Any)
julia> p = Point(3,4)
# Access with reflection
julia> getfield(p, :x)
3
The following is an example in Objective-C, implying either the OpenStep or Foundation Kit framework is used:
// Foo class.
@interface Foo : NSObject
- (void)hello;
@end
// Sending "hello" to a Foo instance without reflection.
Foo *obj = [[Foo alloc] init];
[obj hello];
// Sending "hello" to a Foo instance with reflection.
id obj = [[NSClassFromString(@"Foo") alloc] init];
[obj performSelector: @selector(hello)];
The following is an example in Perl:
# Without reflection
my $foo = Foo->new;
$foo->hello;
# or
Foo->new->hello;
# With reflection
my $class = "Foo"
my $constructor = "new";
my $method = "hello";
my $f = $class->$constructor;
$f->$method;
# or
$class->$constructor->$method;
# with eval
eval "new Foo->hello;";
The following is an example in PHP:
// Without reflection
$foo = new Foo();
$foo->hello();
// With reflection, using Reflections API
$reflector = new ReflectionClass('Foo');
$foo = $reflector->newInstance();
$hello = $reflector->getMethod('hello');
$hello->invoke($foo);
The following is an example in Python:
# Without reflection
obj = Foo()
obj.hello()
# With reflection
obj = globals()["Foo"]()
getattr(obj, "hello")()
# With eval
eval("Foo().hello()")
The following is an example in R:
# Without reflection, assuming foo() returns an S3-type object that has method "hello"
obj <- foo()
hello(obj)
# With reflection
the.class <- "foo"
the.method <- "hello"
obj <- do.call(the.class, list())
do.call(the.method, alist(obj))
The following is an example in Ruby:
# Without reflection
obj = Foo.new
obj.hello
# With reflection
class_name = "Foo"
method_name = :hello
obj = Object.const_get(class_name).new
obj.send method_name
# With eval
eval "Foo.new.hello"
The following is an example using Xojo:
' Without reflection
Dim fooInstance As New Foo
fooInstance.PrintHello
' With reflection
Dim classInfo As Introspection.Typeinfo = GetTypeInfo(Foo)
Dim constructors() As Introspection.ConstructorInfo = classInfo.GetConstructors
Dim fooInstance As Foo = constructors(0).Invoke
Dim methods() As Introspection.MethodInfo = classInfo.GetMethods
For Each m As Introspection.MethodInfo In methods
If m.Name = "PrintHello" Then
m.Invoke(fooInstance)
End If
Next
By: Wikipedia.org
Edited: 2021-06-18 09:47:31
Source: Wikipedia.org