JSObjectOps.getRequiredSlot 编辑
Obsolete since JavaScript 1.8.5
This feature is obsolete. Although it may still work in some browsers, its use is discouraged since it could be removed at any time. Try to avoid using it.
Warning! JSObjectOps
is not a supported API. Details of the API may change from one release to the next. This documentation should be considered SpiderMonkey internals documentation, not API documentation. See bug 408416 for details.
The JSObjectOps.getRequiredSlot
and setRequiredSlot
callbacks get and set a required slot—one that should already have been allocated.
Syntax
typedef jsval (*JSGetRequiredSlotOp)(JSContext *cx, JSObject *obj,
uint32 slot);
typedef JSBool (*JSSetRequiredSlotOp)(JSContext *cx, JSObject *obj,
uint32 slot, jsval v);
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
cx | JSContext * | The JS context in which we access the slot. |
obj | JSObject * | The object whose slot we access. |
slot | uint32 | The index of the slot to access. See note below. |
v | jsval | The value to store in the slot, for JSSetRequiredSlotOp. |
Description
Get and set a required slot, one that should already have been allocated. These operations are infallible, so required slots must be pre-allocated, or implementations must suppress out-of-memory errors. The native ops (js_ObjectOps
, see js/src/jsobj.c
) access slots reserved by including a call to the JSCLASS_HAS_RESERVED_SLOTS(n)
macro in the JSClass.flags
initializer.
Note: The slot
parameter is a zero-based index into obj slots, unlike the index parameter to the JS_GetReservedSlot
and JS_SetReservedSlot
API entry points, which is a zero-based index into the JSCLASS_RESERVED_SLOTS(clasp)
reserved slots that come after the initial well-known slots: proto, parent, class, and optionally, the private data slot.
如果你对这篇内容有疑问,欢迎到本站社区发帖提问 参与讨论,获取更多帮助,或者扫码二维码加入 Web 技术交流群。
绑定邮箱获取回复消息
由于您还没有绑定你的真实邮箱,如果其他用户或者作者回复了您的评论,将不能在第一时间通知您!
发布评论