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- <pre class="prettyprint lang-js"><span id='Ext-Object'>/**
-</span> * @author Jacky Nguyen <jacky@sencha.com>
- * @docauthor Jacky Nguyen <jacky@sencha.com>
- * @class Ext.Object
+ <pre class="prettyprint lang-js"><span id='Object'>/**
+</span> * @class Object
*
- * A collection of useful static methods to deal with objects
+ * Creates an object wrapper.
*
- * @singleton
+ * The Object constructor creates an object wrapper for the given value. If the value is null or
+ * undefined, it will create and return an empty object, otherwise, it will return an object of a type
+ * that corresponds to the given value.
+ *
+ * When called in a non-constructor context, Object behaves identically.
+ *
+ * # Using Object given undefined and null types
+ *
+ * The following examples store an empty Object object in o:
+ * var o = new Object();
+ *
+ * var o = new Object(undefined);
+ *
+ * var o = new Object(null);
+ *
+ * # Using Object to create Boolean objects
+ *
+ * The following examples store Boolean objects in o:
+ *
+ * // equivalent to o = new Boolean(true);
+ * var o = new Object(true);
+ *
+ * // equivalent to o = new Boolean(false);
+ * var o = new Object(Boolean());
+ *
+ * <div class="notice">
+ * Documentation for this class comes from <a href="https://developer.mozilla.org/en/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Object">MDN</a>
+ * and is available under <a href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/">Creative Commons: Attribution-Sharealike license</a>.
+ * </div>
*/
-(function() {
-
-var ExtObject = Ext.Object = {
-
-<span id='Ext-Object-method-toQueryObjects'> /**
-</span> * Convert a `name` - `value` pair to an array of objects with support for nested structures; useful to construct
- * query strings. For example:
-
- var objects = Ext.Object.toQueryObjects('hobbies', ['reading', 'cooking', 'swimming']);
-
- // objects then equals:
- [
- { name: 'hobbies', value: 'reading' },
- { name: 'hobbies', value: 'cooking' },
- { name: 'hobbies', value: 'swimming' },
- ];
-
- var objects = Ext.Object.toQueryObjects('dateOfBirth', {
- day: 3,
- month: 8,
- year: 1987,
- extra: {
- hour: 4
- minute: 30
- }
- }, true); // Recursive
-
- // objects then equals:
- [
- { name: 'dateOfBirth[day]', value: 3 },
- { name: 'dateOfBirth[month]', value: 8 },
- { name: 'dateOfBirth[year]', value: 1987 },
- { name: 'dateOfBirth[extra][hour]', value: 4 },
- { name: 'dateOfBirth[extra][minute]', value: 30 },
- ];
-
- * @param {String} name
- * @param {Mixed} value
- * @param {Boolean} recursive
- * @markdown
- */
- toQueryObjects: function(name, value, recursive) {
- var self = ExtObject.toQueryObjects,
- objects = [],
- i, ln;
-
- if (Ext.isArray(value)) {
- for (i = 0, ln = value.length; i < ln; i++) {
- if (recursive) {
- objects = objects.concat(self(name + '[' + i + ']', value[i], true));
- }
- else {
- objects.push({
- name: name,
- value: value[i]
- });
- }
- }
- }
- else if (Ext.isObject(value)) {
- for (i in value) {
- if (value.hasOwnProperty(i)) {
- if (recursive) {
- objects = objects.concat(self(name + '[' + i + ']', value[i], true));
- }
- else {
- objects.push({
- name: name,
- value: value[i]
- });
- }
- }
- }
- }
- else {
- objects.push({
- name: name,
- value: value
- });
- }
-
- return objects;
- },
-
-<span id='Ext-Object-method-toQueryString'> /**
-</span> * Takes an object and converts it to an encoded query string
-
-- Non-recursive:
-
- Ext.Object.toQueryString({foo: 1, bar: 2}); // returns "foo=1&bar=2"
- Ext.Object.toQueryString({foo: null, bar: 2}); // returns "foo=&bar=2"
- Ext.Object.toQueryString({'some price': '$300'}); // returns "some%20price=%24300"
- Ext.Object.toQueryString({date: new Date(2011, 0, 1)}); // returns "date=%222011-01-01T00%3A00%3A00%22"
- Ext.Object.toQueryString({colors: ['red', 'green', 'blue']}); // returns "colors=red&colors=green&colors=blue"
-
-- Recursive:
-
- Ext.Object.toQueryString({
- username: 'Jacky',
- dateOfBirth: {
- day: 1,
- month: 2,
- year: 1911
- },
- hobbies: ['coding', 'eating', 'sleeping', ['nested', 'stuff']]
- }, true); // returns the following string (broken down and url-decoded for ease of reading purpose):
- // username=Jacky
- // &dateOfBirth[day]=1&dateOfBirth[month]=2&dateOfBirth[year]=1911
- // &hobbies[0]=coding&hobbies[1]=eating&hobbies[2]=sleeping&hobbies[3][0]=nested&hobbies[3][1]=stuff
-
- *
- * @param {Object} object The object to encode
- * @param {Boolean} recursive (optional) Whether or not to interpret the object in recursive format.
- * (PHP / Ruby on Rails servers and similar). Defaults to false
- * @return {String} queryString
- * @markdown
- */
- toQueryString: function(object, recursive) {
- var paramObjects = [],
- params = [],
- i, j, ln, paramObject, value;
-
- for (i in object) {
- if (object.hasOwnProperty(i)) {
- paramObjects = paramObjects.concat(ExtObject.toQueryObjects(i, object[i], recursive));
- }
- }
-
- for (j = 0, ln = paramObjects.length; j < ln; j++) {
- paramObject = paramObjects[j];
- value = paramObject.value;
-
- if (Ext.isEmpty(value)) {
- value = '';
- }
- else if (Ext.isDate(value)) {
- value = Ext.Date.toString(value);
- }
-
- params.push(encodeURIComponent(paramObject.name) + '=' + encodeURIComponent(String(value)));
- }
-
- return params.join('&');
- },
-
-<span id='Ext-Object-method-fromQueryString'> /**
-</span> * Converts a query string back into an object.
- *
-- Non-recursive:
-
- Ext.Object.fromQueryString(foo=1&bar=2); // returns {foo: 1, bar: 2}
- Ext.Object.fromQueryString(foo=&bar=2); // returns {foo: null, bar: 2}
- Ext.Object.fromQueryString(some%20price=%24300); // returns {'some price': '$300'}
- Ext.Object.fromQueryString(colors=red&colors=green&colors=blue); // returns {colors: ['red', 'green', 'blue']}
-
-- Recursive:
-
- Ext.Object.fromQueryString("username=Jacky&dateOfBirth[day]=1&dateOfBirth[month]=2&dateOfBirth[year]=1911&hobbies[0]=coding&hobbies[1]=eating&hobbies[2]=sleeping&hobbies[3][0]=nested&hobbies[3][1]=stuff", true);
-
- // returns
- {
- username: 'Jacky',
- dateOfBirth: {
- day: '1',
- month: '2',
- year: '1911'
- },
- hobbies: ['coding', 'eating', 'sleeping', ['nested', 'stuff']]
- }
-
- * @param {String} queryString The query string to decode
- * @param {Boolean} recursive (Optional) Whether or not to recursively decode the string. This format is supported by
- * PHP / Ruby on Rails servers and similar. Defaults to false
- * @return {Object}
- */
- fromQueryString: function(queryString, recursive) {
- var parts = queryString.replace(/^\?/, '').split('&'),
- object = {},
- temp, components, name, value, i, ln,
- part, j, subLn, matchedKeys, matchedName,
- keys, key, nextKey;
-
- for (i = 0, ln = parts.length; i < ln; i++) {
- part = parts[i];
-
- if (part.length > 0) {
- components = part.split('=');
- name = decodeURIComponent(components[0]);
- value = (components[1] !== undefined) ? decodeURIComponent(components[1]) : '';
-
- if (!recursive) {
- if (object.hasOwnProperty(name)) {
- if (!Ext.isArray(object[name])) {
- object[name] = [object[name]];
- }
-
- object[name].push(value);
- }
- else {
- object[name] = value;
- }
- }
- else {
- matchedKeys = name.match(/(\[):?([^\]]*)\]/g);
- matchedName = name.match(/^([^\[]+)/);
-
- //<debug error>
- if (!matchedName) {
- Ext.Error.raise({
- sourceClass: "Ext.Object",
- sourceMethod: "fromQueryString",
- queryString: queryString,
- recursive: recursive,
- msg: 'Malformed query string given, failed parsing name from "' + part + '"'
- });
- }
- //</debug>
-
- name = matchedName[0];
- keys = [];
-
- if (matchedKeys === null) {
- object[name] = value;
- continue;
- }
-
- for (j = 0, subLn = matchedKeys.length; j < subLn; j++) {
- key = matchedKeys[j];
- key = (key.length === 2) ? '' : key.substring(1, key.length - 1);
- keys.push(key);
- }
-
- keys.unshift(name);
-
- temp = object;
-
- for (j = 0, subLn = keys.length; j < subLn; j++) {
- key = keys[j];
-
- if (j === subLn - 1) {
- if (Ext.isArray(temp) && key === '') {
- temp.push(value);
- }
- else {
- temp[key] = value;
- }
- }
- else {
- if (temp[key] === undefined || typeof temp[key] === 'string') {
- nextKey = keys[j+1];
-
- temp[key] = (Ext.isNumeric(nextKey) || nextKey === '') ? [] : {};
- }
-
- temp = temp[key];
- }
- }
- }
- }
- }
-
- return object;
- },
-
-<span id='Ext-Object-method-each'> /**
-</span> * Iterate through an object and invoke the given callback function for each iteration. The iteration can be stop
- * by returning `false` in the callback function. For example:
-
- var person = {
- name: 'Jacky'
- hairColor: 'black'
- loves: ['food', 'sleeping', 'wife']
- };
-
- Ext.Object.each(person, function(key, value, myself) {
- console.log(key + ":" + value);
-
- if (key === 'hairColor') {
- return false; // stop the iteration
- }
- });
-
- * @param {Object} object The object to iterate
- * @param {Function} fn The callback function. Passed arguments for each iteration are:
-
-- {String} `key`
-- {Mixed} `value`
-- {Object} `object` The object itself
-
- * @param {Object} scope (Optional) The execution scope (`this`) of the callback function
- * @markdown
- */
- each: function(object, fn, scope) {
- for (var property in object) {
- if (object.hasOwnProperty(property)) {
- if (fn.call(scope || object, property, object[property], object) === false) {
- return;
- }
- }
- }
- },
-
-<span id='Ext-Object-method-merge'> /**
-</span> * Merges any number of objects recursively without referencing them or their children.
-
- var extjs = {
- companyName: 'Ext JS',
- products: ['Ext JS', 'Ext GWT', 'Ext Designer'],
- isSuperCool: true
- office: {
- size: 2000,
- location: 'Palo Alto',
- isFun: true
- }
- };
-
- var newStuff = {
- companyName: 'Sencha Inc.',
- products: ['Ext JS', 'Ext GWT', 'Ext Designer', 'Sencha Touch', 'Sencha Animator'],
- office: {
- size: 40000,
- location: 'Redwood City'
- }
- };
-
- var sencha = Ext.Object.merge(extjs, newStuff);
-
- // extjs and sencha then equals to
- {
- companyName: 'Sencha Inc.',
- products: ['Ext JS', 'Ext GWT', 'Ext Designer', 'Sencha Touch', 'Sencha Animator'],
- isSuperCool: true
- office: {
- size: 30000,
- location: 'Redwood City'
- isFun: true
- }
- }
-
- * @param {Object} object,...
- * @return {Object} merged The object that is created as a result of merging all the objects passed in.
- * @markdown
- */
- merge: function(source, key, value) {
- if (typeof key === 'string') {
- if (value && value.constructor === Object) {
- if (source[key] && source[key].constructor === Object) {
- ExtObject.merge(source[key], value);
- }
- else {
- source[key] = Ext.clone(value);
- }
- }
- else {
- source[key] = value;
- }
-
- return source;
- }
-
- var i = 1,
- ln = arguments.length,
- object, property;
-
- for (; i < ln; i++) {
- object = arguments[i];
-
- for (property in object) {
- if (object.hasOwnProperty(property)) {
- ExtObject.merge(source, property, object[property]);
- }
- }
- }
-
- return source;
- },
-
-<span id='Ext-Object-method-getKey'> /**
-</span> * Returns the first matching key corresponding to the given value.
- * If no matching value is found, null is returned.
-
- var person = {
- name: 'Jacky',
- loves: 'food'
- };
-
- alert(Ext.Object.getKey(sencha, 'loves')); // alerts 'food'
-
- * @param {Object} object
- * @param {Object} value The value to find
- * @markdown
- */
- getKey: function(object, value) {
- for (var property in object) {
- if (object.hasOwnProperty(property) && object[property] === value) {
- return property;
- }
- }
-
- return null;
- },
-
-<span id='Ext-Object-method-getValues'> /**
-</span> * Gets all values of the given object as an array.
-
- var values = Ext.Object.getValues({
- name: 'Jacky',
- loves: 'food'
- }); // ['Jacky', 'food']
-
- * @param {Object} object
- * @return {Array} An array of values from the object
- * @markdown
- */
- getValues: function(object) {
- var values = [],
- property;
-
- for (property in object) {
- if (object.hasOwnProperty(property)) {
- values.push(object[property]);
- }
- }
-
- return values;
- },
-
-<span id='Ext-Object-method-getKeys'> /**
-</span> * Gets all keys of the given object as an array.
-
- var values = Ext.Object.getKeys({
- name: 'Jacky',
- loves: 'food'
- }); // ['name', 'loves']
-
- * @param {Object} object
- * @return {Array} An array of keys from the object
- * @method
- */
- getKeys: ('keys' in Object.prototype) ? Object.keys : function(object) {
- var keys = [],
- property;
-
- for (property in object) {
- if (object.hasOwnProperty(property)) {
- keys.push(property);
- }
- }
-
- return keys;
- },
-
-<span id='Ext-Object-method-getSize'> /**
-</span> * Gets the total number of this object's own properties
-
- var size = Ext.Object.getSize({
- name: 'Jacky',
- loves: 'food'
- }); // size equals 2
+<span id='Object-method-constructor'>/**
+</span> * @method constructor
+ * Creates new Object.
+ * @param {Object} [value] The value to wrap.
+ */
- * @param {Object} object
- * @return {Number} size
- * @markdown
- */
- getSize: function(object) {
- var size = 0,
- property;
+//Properties
- for (property in object) {
- if (object.hasOwnProperty(property)) {
- size++;
- }
- }
+<span id='Object-property-prototype'>/**
+</span> * @property prototype
+ * Allows the addition of properties to all objects of type Object.
+ */
- return size;
- }
-};
+//Methods
+<span id='Object-method-hasOwnProperty'>/**
+</span> * @method hasOwnProperty
+ * Returns a boolean indicating whether an object contains the specified property as a direct property
+ * of that object and not inherited through the prototype chain.
+ *
+ * Every object descended from `Object` inherits the `hasOwnProperty` method. This method can be used
+ * to determine whether an object has the specified property as a direct property of that object;
+ * unlike the `in` operator, this method does not check down the object's prototype chain.
+ *
+ * The following example determines whether the o object contains a property named prop:
+ *
+ * o = new Object();
+ * o.prop = 'exists';
+ *
+ * function changeO() {
+ * o.newprop = o.prop;
+ * delete o.prop;
+ * }
+ *
+ * o.hasOwnProperty('prop'); //returns true
+ * changeO();
+ * o.hasOwnProperty('prop'); //returns false
+ *
+ * The following example differentiates between direct properties and properties inherited through the
+ * prototype chain:
+ *
+ * o = new Object();
+ * o.prop = 'exists';
+ * o.hasOwnProperty('prop'); // returns true
+ * o.hasOwnProperty('toString'); // returns false
+ * o.hasOwnProperty('hasOwnProperty'); // returns false
+ *
+ * The following example shows how to iterate over the properties of an object without executing on
+ * inherit properties.
+ *
+ * var buz = {
+ * fog: 'stack'
+ * };
+ *
+ * for (var name in buz) {
+ * if (buz.hasOwnProperty(name)) {
+ * alert("this is fog (" + name + ") for sure. Value: " + buz[name]);
+ * }
+ * else {
+ * alert(name); // toString or something else
+ * }
+ * }
+ *
+ * @param {String} prop The name of the property to test.
+ * @return {Boolean} Returns true if object contains specified property; else
+ * returns false.
+ */
-<span id='Ext-method-merge'>/**
-</span> * A convenient alias method for {@link Ext.Object#merge}
+<span id='Object-method-isPrototypeOf'>/**
+</span> * @method isPrototypeOf
+ * Returns a boolean indication whether the specified object is in the prototype chain of the object
+ * this method is called upon.
+ *
+ * `isPrototypeOf` allows you to check whether or not an object exists within another object's
+ * prototype chain.
+ *
+ * For example, consider the following prototype chain:
+ *
+ * function Fee() {
+ * // . . .
+ * }
+ *
+ * function Fi() {
+ * // . . .
+ * }
+ * Fi.prototype = new Fee();
+ *
+ * function Fo() {
+ * // . . .
+ * }
+ * Fo.prototype = new Fi();
+ *
+ * function Fum() {
+ * // . . .
+ * }
+ * Fum.prototype = new Fo();
+ *
+ * Later on down the road, if you instantiate `Fum` and need to check if `Fi`'s prototype exists
+ * within the `Fum` prototype chain, you could do this:
*
- * @member Ext
- * @method merge
+ * var fum = new Fum();
+ * . . .
+ *
+ * if (Fi.prototype.isPrototypeOf(fum)) {
+ * // do something safe
+ * }
+ *
+ * This, along with the `instanceof` operator particularly comes in handy if you have code that can
+ * only function when dealing with objects descended from a specific prototype chain, e.g., to
+ * guarantee that certain methods or properties will be present on that object.
+ *
+ * @param {Object} prototype an object to be tested against each link in the prototype chain of the
+ * *object* argument
+ * @param {Object} object the object whose prototype chain will be searched
+ * @return {Boolean} Returns true if object is a prototype and false if not.
*/
-Ext.merge = Ext.Object.merge;
-<span id='Ext-method-urlEncode'>/**
-</span> * A convenient alias method for {@link Ext.Object#toQueryString}
+<span id='Object-method-propertyIsEnumerable'>/**
+</span> * @method propertyIsEnumerable
+ * Returns a boolean indicating if the internal ECMAScript DontEnum attribute is set.
+ *
+ * Every object has a `propertyIsEnumerable` method. This method can determine whether the specified
+ * property in an object can be enumerated by a `for...in` loop, with the exception of properties
+ * inherited through the prototype chain. If the object does not have the specified property, this
+ * method returns false.
+ *
+ * The following example shows the use of `propertyIsEnumerable` on objects and arrays:
+ *
+ * var o = {};
+ * var a = [];
+ * o.prop = 'is enumerable';
+ * a[0] = 'is enumerable';
+ *
+ * o.propertyIsEnumerable('prop'); // returns true
+ * a.propertyIsEnumerable(0); // returns true
+ *
+ * The following example demonstrates the enumerability of user-defined versus built-in properties:
+ *
+ * var a = ['is enumerable'];
+ *
+ * a.propertyIsEnumerable(0); // returns true
+ * a.propertyIsEnumerable('length'); // returns false
+ *
+ * Math.propertyIsEnumerable('random'); // returns false
+ * this.propertyIsEnumerable('Math'); // returns false
*
- * @member Ext
- * @method urlEncode
- * @deprecated 4.0.0 Use {@link Ext.Object#toQueryString Ext.Object.toQueryString} instead
+ * Direct versus inherited properties
+ *
+ * var a = [];
+ * a.propertyIsEnumerable('constructor'); // returns false
+ *
+ * function firstConstructor()
+ * {
+ * this.property = 'is not enumerable';
+ * }
+ * firstConstructor.prototype.firstMethod = function () {};
+ *
+ * function secondConstructor()
+ * {
+ * this.method = function method() { return 'is enumerable'; };
+ * }
+ *
+ * secondConstructor.prototype = new firstConstructor;
+ * secondConstructor.prototype.constructor = secondConstructor;
+ *
+ * var o = new secondConstructor();
+ * o.arbitraryProperty = 'is enumerable';
+ *
+ * o.propertyIsEnumerable('arbitraryProperty'); // returns true
+ * o.propertyIsEnumerable('method'); // returns true
+ * o.propertyIsEnumerable('property'); // returns false
+ *
+ * o.property = 'is enumerable';
+ *
+ * o.propertyIsEnumerable('property'); // returns true
+ *
+ * // These return false as they are on the prototype which
+ * // propertyIsEnumerable does not consider (even though the last two
+ * // are iteratable with for-in)
+ * o.propertyIsEnumerable('prototype'); // returns false (as of JS 1.8.1/FF3.6)
+ * o.propertyIsEnumerable('constructor'); // returns false
+ * o.propertyIsEnumerable('firstMethod'); // returns false
+ *
+ * @param {String} prop The name of the property to test.
+ * @return {Boolean} If the object does not have the specified property, this
+ * method returns false.
*/
-Ext.urlEncode = function() {
- var args = Ext.Array.from(arguments),
- prefix = '';
- // Support for the old `pre` argument
- if ((typeof args[1] === 'string')) {
- prefix = args[1] + '&';
- args[1] = false;
- }
+<span id='Object-method-toLocaleString'>/**
+</span> * @method toLocaleString
+ * Returns a string representing the object. This method is meant to be overridden by derived objects
+ * for locale-specific purposes.
+ *
+ * `Object`'s `toLocaleString` returns the result of calling `toString`.
+ *
+ * This function is provided to give objects a generic `toLocaleString` method, even though not all
+ * may use it. Currently, only `Array`, `Number`, and `Date` override `toLocaleString`.
+ *
+ * @return {String} Object represented as a string.
+ */
- return prefix + Ext.Object.toQueryString.apply(Ext.Object, args);
-};
+<span id='Object-method-toString'>/**
+</span> * @method toString
+ * Returns a string representation of the object.
+ *
+ * Every object has a `toString()` method that is automatically called when the object is to be
+ * represented as a text value or when an object is referred to in a manner in which a string is
+ * expected. By default, the `toString()` method is inherited by every object descended from `Object`.
+ * If this method is not overridden in a custom object, `toString()` returns "[object type]", where
+ * `type` is the object type. The following code illustrates this:
+ *
+ * var o = new Object();
+ * o.toString(); // returns [object Object]
+ *
+ * You can create a function to be called in place of the default `toString()` method. The
+ * `toString()` method takes no arguments and should return a string. The `toString()` method you
+ * create can be any value you want, but it will be most useful if it carries information about the
+ * object.
+ *
+ * The following code defines the `Dog` object type and creates `theDog`, an object of type `Dog`:
+ *
+ * function Dog(name,breed,color,sex) {
+ * this.name=name;
+ * this.breed=breed;
+ * this.color=color;
+ * this.sex=sex;
+ * }
+ *
+ * theDog = new Dog("Gabby","Lab","chocolate","female");
+ *
+ * If you call the `toString()` method on this custom object, it returns the default value inherited
+ * from `Object`:
+ *
+ * theDog.toString(); //returns [object Object]
+ *
+ * The following code creates and assigns `dogToString()` to override the default `toString()` method.
+ * This function generates a string containing the name, breed, color, and sex of the object, in the
+ * form `"property = value;"`.
+ *
+ * Dog.prototype.toString = function dogToString() {
+ * var ret = "Dog " + this.name + " is a " + this.sex + " " + this.color + " " + this.breed;
+ * return ret;
+ * }
+ *
+ * With the preceding code in place, any time theDog is used in a string context, JavaScript
+ * automatically calls the `dogToString()` function, which returns the following string:
+ *
+ * Dog Gabby is a female chocolate Lab
+ *
+ * `toString()` can be used with every object and allows you to get its class. To use the
+ * `Object.prototype.toString()` with every object, you need to call `Function.prototype.call()` or
+ * `Function.prototype.apply()` on it, passing the object you want to inspect as the first parameter
+ * called `thisArg`.
+ *
+ * var toString = Object.prototype.toString;
+ *
+ * toString.call(new Date); // [object Date]
+ * toString.call(new String); // [object String]
+ * toString.call(Math); // [object Math]
+ *
+ * @return {String} Object represented as a string.
+ */
-<span id='Ext-method-urlDecode'>/**
-</span> * A convenient alias method for {@link Ext.Object#fromQueryString}
+<span id='Object-method-valueOf'>/**
+</span> * @method valueOf
+ * Returns the primitive value of the specified object.
+ *
+ * JavaScript calls the `valueOf` method to convert an object to a primitive value. You rarely need to
+ * invoke the `valueOf` method yourself; JavaScript automatically invokes it when encountering an
+ * object where a primitive value is expected.
*
- * @member Ext
- * @method urlDecode
- * @deprecated 4.0.0 Use {@link Ext.Object#fromQueryString Ext.Object.fromQueryString} instead
+ * By default, the `valueOf` method is inherited by every object descended from `Object`. Every built-
+ * in core object overrides this method to return an appropriate value. If an object has no primitive
+ * value, `valueOf` returns the object itself, which is displayed as:
+ *
+ * [object Object]
+ *
+ * You can use `valueOf` within your own code to convert a built-in object into a primitive value.
+ * When you create a custom object, you can override `Object.valueOf` to call a custom method instead
+ * of the default `Object` method.
+ *
+ * You can create a function to be called in place of the default `valueOf` method. Your function must
+ * take no arguments.
+ *
+ * Suppose you have an object type `myNumberType` and you want to create a `valueOf` method for it.
+ * The following code assigns a user-defined function to the object's valueOf method:
+ *
+ * myNumberType.prototype.valueOf = new Function(functionText)
+ *
+ * With the preceding code in place, any time an object of type `myNumberType` is used in a context
+ * where it is to be represented as a primitive value, JavaScript automatically calls the function
+ * defined in the preceding code.
+ *
+ * An object's `valueOf` method is usually invoked by JavaScript, but you can invoke it yourself as
+ * follows:
+ *
+ * myNumber.valueOf()
+ *
+ * Note: Objects in string contexts convert via the `toString` method, which is different from
+ * `String` objects converting to string primitives using `valueOf`. All objects have a string
+ * conversion, if only `"[object type]"`. But many objects do not convert to number, boolean, or
+ * function.
+ *
+ * @return {Object} Returns value of the object or the object itself.
*/
-Ext.urlDecode = function() {
- return Ext.Object.fromQueryString.apply(Ext.Object, arguments);
-};
-})();
-</pre>
+//Properties
+
+<span id='Object-property-constructor'>/**
+</span> * @property constructor
+ * Specifies the function that creates an object's prototype.
+ *
+ * Returns a reference to the Object function that created the instance's prototype. Note that the
+ * value of this property is a reference to the function itself, not a string containing the
+ * function's name, but it isn't read only (except for primitive Boolean, Number or String values: 1,
+ * true, "read-only").
+ *
+ * All objects inherit a `constructor` property from their `prototype`:
+ *
+ * o = new Object // or o = {} in JavaScript 1.2
+ * o.constructor == Object
+ * a = new Array // or a = [] in JavaScript 1.2
+ * a.constructor == Array
+ * n = new Number(3)
+ * n.constructor == Number
+ *
+ * Even though you cannot construct most HTML objects, you can do comparisons. For example,
+ *
+ * document.constructor == Document
+ * document.form3.constructor == Form
+ *
+ * The following example creates a prototype, `Tree`, and an object of that type, theTree. The example then displays the `constructor` property for the object `theTree`.
+ *
+ * function Tree(name) {
+ * this.name = name;
+ * }
+ * theTree = new Tree("Redwood");
+ * console.log("theTree.constructor is " + theTree.constructor);
+ *
+ * This example displays the following output:
+ *
+ * theTree.constructor is function Tree(name) {
+ * this.name = name;
+ * }
+ *
+ * The following example shows how to modify constructor value of generic objects. Only true, 1 and
+ * "test" variable constructors will not be changed. This example explains that is not always so safe
+ * to believe in constructor function.
+ *
+ * function Type(){};
+ * var types = [
+ * new Array, [],
+ * new Boolean, true,
+ * new Date,
+ * new Error,
+ * new Function, function(){},
+ * Math,
+ * new Number, 1,
+ * new Object, {},
+ * new RegExp, /(?:)/,
+ * new String, "test"
+ * ];
+ * for(var i = 0; i < types.length; i++){
+ * types[i].constructor = Type;
+ * types[i] = [types[i].constructor, types[i] instanceof Type, types[i].toString()];
+ * };
+ * alert(types.join("\n"));
+ */</pre>
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