Categorygithub.com/gopherjs/jsbuiltin
modulepackage
0.0.0-20180426082241-50091555e127
Repository: https://github.com/gopherjs/jsbuiltin.git
Documentation: pkg.go.dev

# README

Build Status GoDoc

jsbuiltin - Built-in JavaScript functions for GopherJS

JavaScript has a small number of built-in functions to handle some common day-to-day tasks. This package providers wrappers around some of these functions for use in GopherJS.

It is worth noting that in many cases, using Go's equivalent functionality (such as that found in the net/url package) may be preferable to using this package, and will be a necessity any time you wish to share functionality between front-end and back-end code.

What is supported?

Not all JavaScript built-in functions make sense or are useful in a Go environment. The table below shows each of the JavaScript built-in functions, and its current state in this package.

NameSupportedComment
eval()--
uneval()--
isFinite()yes
isNaN()yes
parseFloat()TODO?See note below
parseInt()TODO?See note below
decodeURI()yes
decodeURIComponent()yes
encodeURI()yes
encodeURIComponent()yes
escape()--deprecated circa 2000
Number()--See note below
String()--Use js.Object.String()
unescape()--deprecated circa 2000
typeof operatoryes
instanceof operatoryes

Notes on unmplemented functions

  • eval(): Is there ever a need to eval JS code from within Go?
  • Number(): This requires handling a bunch of corner cases which don't normally exist in a strictly typed language such as Go. It seems that anyone with a legitimate need for this function probably needs to write their own wrapper to handle the cases that matter to them.
  • parseInt() and parseFloat(): These could be added, but doing so will require answering some questions about the interfce. JavaScript has effectively two relevant data types (int and float) where Go has has 12. Deciding how to map JS's parseInt() to Go's (u?)int(8|16|32|64) types, and JS's parseFloat() Go's float(32|64) or complex(64|128) needs to be considered, as well as how to handle error cases (Go doesn't have a NaN type, so any NaN result probably needs to be converted to a proper Go error). If this matters to you, comments and/or PRs are welcome.

Installation and Usage

Get or update this package and dependencies with:

go get -u -d -tags=js github.com/gopherjs/jsbuiltin

Basic usage example

This is a modified version of the Pet example in the main GopherJS documentation, to accept and return URI-encoded pet names using the jsbuiltin package.

package main

import (
	"github.com/gopherjs/gopherjs/js"
	"github.com/gopherjs/jsbuiltin"
)

func main() {
	js.Global.Set("pet", map[string]interface{}{
		"New": New,
	})
}

type Pet struct {
	name string
}

func New(name string) *js.Object {
	return js.MakeWrapper(&Pet{name})
}

func (p *Pet) Name() string {
	return jsbuiltin.EncodeURIComponent(p.name)
}

func (p *Pet) SetName(uriComponent string) error {
	name, err := jsbuiltin.DecodeURIComponent(uriComponent)
	if err != nil {
		// Malformed UTF8 in uriComponent
		return err
	}
	p.name = name
	return nil
}

# Functions

DecodeURI decodes a Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) previously created by EncodeURI() or by a similar routine.
DecodeURIComponent decodes a Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) component previously created by EncodeURIComponent() or by a similar routine.
EncodeURI encodes a Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) by replacing each instance of certain characters by one, two, three, or four escape sequences representing the UTF-8 encoding of the character (will only be four escape sequences for characters composed of two "surrogate" characters).
EncodeURIComponent encodes a Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) component by replacing each instance of certain characters by one, two, three, or four escape sequences representing the UTF-8 encoding of the character (will only be four escape sequences for characters composed of two "surrogate" characters).
In returns true if key is a member of obj.
InstanceOf returns true if value is an instance of object according to the built-in 'instanceof' operator.
IsFinite determines whether the passed value is a finite number, and returns true if it is.
IsNaN determines whether a value is NaN (Not-a-Number) or not.
TypeOf returns the JavaScript type of the passed value.

# Constants

Type constants represent the JavaScript builtin types, which may be returned by TypeOf().
Type constants represent the JavaScript builtin types, which may be returned by TypeOf().
Type constants represent the JavaScript builtin types, which may be returned by TypeOf().
Type constants represent the JavaScript builtin types, which may be returned by TypeOf().
Type constants represent the JavaScript builtin types, which may be returned by TypeOf().
Type constants represent the JavaScript builtin types, which may be returned by TypeOf().
Type constants represent the JavaScript builtin types, which may be returned by TypeOf().
Type constants represent the JavaScript builtin types, which may be returned by TypeOf().