/*****************************************************************************
* Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one *
* or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file *
* distributed with this work for additional information *
* regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file *
* to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the *
* "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance *
* with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at *
* *
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 *
* *
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, *
* software distributed under the License is distributed on an *
* "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY *
* KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the *
* specific language governing permissions and limitations *
* under the License. *
* *
* *
* This file is part of the BeanShell Java Scripting distribution. *
* Documentation and updates may be found at http://www.beanshell.org/ *
* Patrick Niemeyer (pat@pat.net) *
* Author of Learning Java, O'Reilly & Associates *
* *
*****************************************************************************/
package bsh;
/**
A specialized namespace for Blocks (e.g. the body of a "for" statement).
The Block acts like a child namespace but only for typed variables
declared within it (block local scope) or untyped variables explicitly set
in it via setBlockVariable(). Otherwise variable assignment
(including untyped variable usage) acts like it is part of the containing
block.
<p>
*/
/*
Note: This class essentially just delegates most of its methods to its
parent. The setVariable() indirection is very small. We could probably
fold this functionality back into the base NameSpace as a special case.
But this has changed a few times so I'd like to leave this abstraction for
now.
*/
class
BlockNameSpace extends
NameSpace
{
public
BlockNameSpace(
NameSpace parent )
throws
EvalError
{
super(
parent,
parent.
getName()+ "/BlockNameSpace" );
}
/**
Override the standard namespace behavior to make assignments
happen in our parent (enclosing) namespace, unless the variable has
already been assigned here via a typed declaration or through
the special setBlockVariable() (used for untyped args in try/catch).
<p>
i.e. only allow typed var declaration to happen in this namespace.
Typed vars are handled in the ordinary way local scope. All untyped
assignments are delegated to the enclosing context.
*/
/*
Note: it may see like with the new 1.3 scoping this test could be
removed, but it cannot. When recurse is false we still need to set the
variable in our parent, not here.
*/
public void
setVariable(
String name,
Object value, boolean
strictJava, boolean
recurse )
throws
UtilEvalError
{
if (
weHaveVar(
name ) )
// set the var here in the block namespace
super.setVariable(
name,
value,
strictJava, false );
else
// set the var in the enclosing (parent) namespace
getParent().
setVariable(
name,
value,
strictJava,
recurse );
}
/**
Set an untyped variable in the block namespace.
The BlockNameSpace would normally delegate this set to the parent.
Typed variables are naturally set locally.
This is used in try/catch block argument.
*/
public void
setBlockVariable(
String name,
Object value )
throws
UtilEvalError
{
super.setVariable(
name,
value, false/*strict?*/, false );
}
/**
We have the variable: either it was declared here with a type, giving
it block local scope or an untyped var was explicitly set here via
setBlockVariable().
*/
private boolean
weHaveVar(
String name )
{
// super.variables.containsKey( name ) not any faster, I checked
try {
return super.getVariableImpl(
name, false ) != null;
} catch (
UtilEvalError e ) { return false; }
}
/**
Get the actual BlockNameSpace 'this' reference.
<p/>
Normally a 'this' reference to a BlockNameSpace (e.g. if () { } )
resolves to the parent namespace (e.g. the namespace containing the
"if" statement). However when code inside the BlockNameSpace needs to
resolve things relative to 'this' we must use the actual block's 'this'
reference. Name.java is smart enough to handle this using
getBlockThis().
@see #getThis( Interpreter )
This getBlockThis( Interpreter declaringInterpreter )
{
return super.getThis( declaringInterpreter );
}
*/
//
// Begin methods which simply delegate to our parent (enclosing scope)
//
/**
This method recurses to find the nearest non-BlockNameSpace parent.
public NameSpace getParent()
{
NameSpace parent = super.getParent();
if ( parent instanceof BlockNameSpace )
return parent.getParent();
else
return parent;
}
*/
/** do we need this? */
private
NameSpace getNonBlockParent()
{
NameSpace parent = super.getParent();
if (
parent instanceof
BlockNameSpace )
return ((
BlockNameSpace)
parent).
getNonBlockParent();
else
return
parent;
}
/**
Get a 'this' reference is our parent's 'this' for the object closure.
e.g. Normally a 'this' reference to a BlockNameSpace (e.g. if () { } )
resolves to the parent namespace (e.g. the namespace containing the
"if" statement).
@see #getBlockThis( Interpreter )
*/
public
This getThis(
Interpreter declaringInterpreter ) {
return
getNonBlockParent().
getThis(
declaringInterpreter );
}
/**
super is our parent's super
*/
public
This getSuper(
Interpreter declaringInterpreter ) {
return
getNonBlockParent().
getSuper(
declaringInterpreter );
}
/**
delegate import to our parent
*/
public void
importClass(
String name) {
getParent().
importClass(
name );
}
/**
delegate import to our parent
*/
public void
importPackage(
String name) {
getParent().
importPackage(
name );
}
public void
setMethod(
String name,
BshMethod method)
throws
UtilEvalError
{
getParent().
setMethod(
name,
method );
}
}