blob: a68b97c87b991ee152ee5ae4a74a2dc2d76edf46 [file] [log] [blame]
Bram Moolenaar71badf92023-04-22 22:40:14 +01001*vim9class.txt* For Vim version 9.0. Last change: 2023 Mar 22
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +00002
3
4 VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar
5
6
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +00007NOTE - This is not finished yet, anything can still change! - NOTE
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +00008
9
10Vim9 classes, objects, interfaces, types and enums.
11
121. Overview |Vim9-class-overview|
132. A simple class |Vim9-simple-class|
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +0000143. Class members and functions |Vim9-class-member|
154. Using an abstract class |Vim9-abstract-class|
165. Using an interface |Vim9-using-interface|
176. More class details |Vim9-class|
187. Type definition |Vim9-type|
198. Enum |Vim9-enum|
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +000020
219. Rationale
2210. To be done later
23
24==============================================================================
25
261. Overview *Vim9-class-overview*
27
28The fancy term is "object-oriented programming". You can find lots of study
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +000029material on this subject. Here we document what |Vim9| script provides,
30assuming you know the basics already. Added are helpful hints about how to
31use this functionality effectively.
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +000032
33The basic item is an object:
34- An object stores state. It contains one or more variables that can each
35 have a value.
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +000036- An object provides functions that use and manipulate its state. These
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +000037 functions are invoked "on the object", which is what sets it apart from the
38 traditional separation of data and code that manipulates the data.
39- An object has a well defined interface, with typed member variables and
40 member functions.
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +000041- Objects are created from a class and all objects have the same interface.
42 This does not change at runtime, it is not dynamic.
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +000043
44An object can only be created by a class. A class provides:
45- A new() method, the constructor, which returns an object for the class.
46 This method is invoked on the class name: MyClass.new().
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +000047- State shared by all objects of the class: class variables (class members).
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +000048- A hierarchy of classes, with super-classes and sub-classes, inheritance.
49
50An interface is used to specify properties of an object:
51- An object can declare several interfaces that it implements.
52- Different objects implementing the same interface can be used the same way.
53
54The class hierarchy allows for single inheritance. Otherwise interfaces are
55to be used where needed.
56
57
58Class modeling ~
59
60You can model classes any way you like. Keep in mind what you are building,
61don't try to model the real world. This can be confusing, especially because
62teachers use real-world objects to explain class relations and you might think
63your model should therefore reflect the real world. It doesn't! The model
64should match your purpose.
65
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +000066Keep in mind that composition (an object contains other objects) is often
67better than inheritance (an object extends another object). Don't waste time
68trying to find the optimal class model. Or waste time discussing whether a
69square is a rectangle or that a rectangle is a square. It doesn't matter.
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +000070
71
72==============================================================================
73
742. A simple class *Vim9-simple-class*
75
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +000076Let's start with a simple example: a class that stores a text position (see
77below for how to do this more efficiently): >
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +000078
79 class TextPosition
80 this.lnum: number
81 this.col: number
82
83 def new(lnum: number, col: number)
84 this.lnum = lnum
85 this.col = col
86 enddef
87
88 def SetLnum(lnum: number)
89 this.lnum = lnum
90 enddef
91
92 def SetCol(col: number)
93 this.col = col
94 enddef
95
96 def SetPosition(lnum: number, col: number)
97 this.lnum = lnum
98 this.col = col
99 enddef
100 endclass
Bram Moolenaar7db29e42022-12-11 15:53:04 +0000101< *object* *Object*
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000102You can create an object from this class with the new() method: >
103
104 var pos = TextPosition.new(1, 1)
105
106The object members "lnum" and "col" can be accessed directly: >
107
108 echo $'The text position is ({pos.lnum}, {pos.col})'
Bram Moolenaar7db29e42022-12-11 15:53:04 +0000109< *E1317* *E1327*
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000110If you have been using other object-oriented languages you will notice that
111in Vim the object members are consistently referred to with the "this."
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +0000112prefix. This is different from languages like Java and TypeScript. The
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000113naming convention makes the object members easy to spot. Also, when a
114variable does not have the "this." prefix you know it is not an object member.
115
116
117Member write access ~
118
119Now try to change an object member directly: >
120
121 pos.lnum = 9
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +0000122< *E1335*
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000123This will give you an error! That is because by default object members can be
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +0000124read but not set. That's why the TextPosition class provides a method for it: >
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000125
126 pos.SetLnum(9)
127
128Allowing to read but not set an object member is the most common and safest
129way. Most often there is no problem using a value, while setting a value may
130have side effects that need to be taken care of. In this case, the SetLnum()
131method could check if the line number is valid and either give an error or use
132the closest valid value.
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +0000133 *:public* *E1331*
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000134If you don't care about side effects and want to allow the object member to be
135changed at any time, you can make it public: >
136
137 public this.lnum: number
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +0000138 public this.col: number
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000139
140Now you don't need the SetLnum(), SetCol() and SetPosition() methods, setting
141"pos.lnum" directly above will no longer give an error.
Bram Moolenaarf1dcd142022-12-31 15:30:45 +0000142 *E1334*
143If you try to set an object member that doesn't exist you get an error: >
144 pos.other = 9
145< E1334: Object member not found: other ~
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000146
147
148Private members ~
Bram Moolenaarf1dcd142022-12-31 15:30:45 +0000149 *E1332* *E1333*
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000150On the other hand, if you do not want the object members to be read directly,
151you can make them private. This is done by prefixing an underscore to the
152name: >
153
154 this._lnum: number
155 this._col number
156
157Now you need to provide methods to get the value of the private members.
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +0000158These are commonly called getters. We recommend using a name that starts with
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000159"Get": >
160
161 def GetLnum(): number
162 return this._lnum
163 enddef
164
165 def GetCol() number
166 return this._col
167 enddef
168
169This example isn't very useful, the members might as well have been public.
170It does become useful if you check the value. For example, restrict the line
171number to the total number of lines: >
172
173 def GetLnum(): number
174 if this._lnum > this._lineCount
175 return this._lineCount
176 endif
177 return this._lnum
178 enddef
179
180
181Simplifying the new() method ~
182
183Many constructors take values for the object members. Thus you very often see
184this pattern: >
185
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +0000186 class SomeClass
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000187 this.lnum: number
188 this.col: number
189
190 def new(lnum: number, col: number)
191 this.lnum = lnum
192 this.col = col
193 enddef
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +0000194 endclass
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000195
196Not only is this text you need to write, it also has the type of each member
197twice. Since this is so common a shorter way to write new() is provided: >
198
199 def new(this.lnum, this.col)
200 enddef
201
202The semantics are easy to understand: Providing the object member name,
203including "this.", as the argument to new() means the value provided in the
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +0000204new() call is assigned to that object member. This mechanism comes from the
205Dart language.
206
207Putting together this way of using new() and making the members public results
Bram Moolenaar71badf92023-04-22 22:40:14 +0100208in a much shorter class definition than what we started with: >
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +0000209
210 class TextPosition
211 public this.lnum: number
212 public this.col: number
213
214 def new(this.lnum, this.col)
215 enddef
216
217 def SetPosition(lnum: number, col: number)
218 this.lnum = lnum
219 this.col = col
220 enddef
221 endclass
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000222
223The sequence of constructing a new object is:
2241. Memory is allocated and cleared. All values are zero/false/empty.
2252. For each declared member that has an initializer, the expression is
226 evaluated and assigned to the member. This happens in the sequence the
227 members are declared in the class.
2283. Arguments in the new() method in the "this.name" form are assigned.
2294. The body of the new() method is executed.
230
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +0000231If the class extends a parent class, the same thing happens. In the second
232step the members of the parent class are done first. There is no need to call
233"super()" or "new()" on the parent.
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000234
Yegappan Lakshmanan6ac15442023-08-20 18:20:17 +0200235When defining the new() method the return type should not be specified. It
236always returns an object of the class.
237
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000238==============================================================================
239
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +00002403. class members and functions *Vim9-class-member*
241
242 *:static* *E1337* *E1338*
243Class members are declared with "static". They are used by the name without a
244prefix: >
245
246 class OtherThing
247 this.size: number
248 static totalSize: number
249
250 def new(this.size)
251 totalSize += this.size
252 enddef
253 endclass
254< *E1340* *E1341*
255Since the name is used as-is, shadowing the name by a function argument name
256or local variable name is not allowed.
257
258Just like object members the access can be made private by using an underscore
259as the first character in the name, and it can be made public by prefixing
260"public": >
261
262 class OtherThing
263 static total: number # anybody can read, only class can write
264 static _sum: number # only class can read and write
265 public static result: number # anybody can read and write
266 endclass
267<
268 *class-function*
269Class functions are also declared with "static". They have no access to
270object members, they cannot use the "this" keyword. >
271
272 class OtherThing
273 this.size: number
274 static totalSize: number
275
276 # Clear the total size and return the value it had before.
277 static def ClearTotalSize(): number
278 var prev = totalSize
279 totalSize = 0
280 return prev
281 enddef
282 endclass
283
284Inside the class the function can be called by name directly, outside the
285class the class name must be prefixed: `OtherThing.ClearTotalSize()`.
286
287==============================================================================
288
2894. Using an abstract class *Vim9-abstract-class*
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000290
291An abstract class forms the base for at least one sub-class. In the class
292model one often finds that a few classes have the same properties that can be
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +0000293shared, but a class with these properties does not have enough state to create
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000294an object from. A sub-class must extend the abstract class and add the
295missing state and/or methods before it can be used to create objects for.
296
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000297For example, a Shape class could store a color and thickness. You cannot
298create a Shape object, it is missing the information about what kind of shape
299it is. The Shape class functions as the base for a Square and a Triangle
300class, for which objects can be created. Example: >
301
302 abstract class Shape
303 this.color = Color.Black
304 this.thickness = 10
305 endclass
306
307 class Square extends Shape
308 this.size: number
309
310 def new(this.size)
311 enddef
312 endclass
313
314 class Triangle extends Shape
315 this.base: number
316 this.height: number
317
318 def new(this.base, this.height)
319 enddef
320 endclass
321<
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +0000322An abstract class is defined the same way as a normal class, except that it
323does not have any new() method. *E1359*
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000324
325
326==============================================================================
327
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +00003285. Using an interface *Vim9-using-interface*
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000329
330The example above with Shape, Square and Triangle can be made more useful if
331we add a method to compute the surface of the object. For that we create the
332interface called HasSurface, which specifies one method Surface() that returns
333a number. This example extends the one above: >
334
335 abstract class Shape
336 this.color = Color.Black
337 this.thickness = 10
338 endclass
339
340 interface HasSurface
341 def Surface(): number
342 endinterface
343
344 class Square extends Shape implements HasSurface
345 this.size: number
346
347 def new(this.size)
348 enddef
349
350 def Surface(): number
351 return this.size * this.size
352 enddef
353 endclass
354
355 class Triangle extends Shape implements HasSurface
356 this.base: number
357 this.height: number
358
359 def new(this.base, this.height)
360 enddef
361
362 def Surface(): number
363 return this.base * this.height / 2
364 enddef
365 endclass
366
Bram Moolenaar1b5f03e2023-01-09 20:12:45 +0000367If a class declares to implement an interface, all the items specified in the
368interface must appear in the class, with the same types. *E1348* *E1349*
369
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000370The interface name can be used as a type: >
371
372 var shapes: list<HasSurface> = [
373 Square.new(12),
374 Triangle.new(8, 15),
375 ]
376 for shape in shapes
377 echo $'the surface is {shape.Surface()}'
378 endfor
379
380
381==============================================================================
382
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +00003836. More class details *Vim9-class* *Class* *class*
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000384
385Defining a class ~
386 *:class* *:endclass* *:abstract*
387A class is defined between `:class` and `:endclass`. The whole class is
388defined in one script file. It is not possible to add to a class later.
389
Bram Moolenaar7db29e42022-12-11 15:53:04 +0000390A class can only be defined in a |Vim9| script file. *E1316*
Bram Moolenaar00b28d62022-12-08 15:32:33 +0000391A class cannot be defined inside a function.
392
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000393It is possible to define more than one class in a script file. Although it
394usually is better to export only one main class. It can be useful to define
395types, enums and helper classes though.
396
397The `:abstract` keyword may be prefixed and `:export` may be used. That gives
398these variants: >
399
400 class ClassName
401 endclass
402
403 export class ClassName
404 endclass
405
406 abstract class ClassName
407 endclass
408
409 export abstract class ClassName
410 endclass
411<
412 *E1314*
413The class name should be CamelCased. It must start with an uppercase letter.
414That avoids clashing with builtin types.
Bram Moolenaar7db29e42022-12-11 15:53:04 +0000415 *E1315*
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000416After the class name these optional items can be used. Each can appear only
417once. They can appear in any order, although this order is recommended: >
418 extends ClassName
419 implements InterfaceName, OtherInterface
420 specifies SomeInterface
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +0000421< *E1355*
422Each member and function name can be used only once. It is not possible to
423define a function with the same name and different type of arguments.
424
425
426Extending a class ~
427 *extends*
Bram Moolenaar1b5f03e2023-01-09 20:12:45 +0000428A class can extend one other class. *E1352* *E1353* *E1354*
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +0000429The basic idea is to build on top of an existing class, add properties to it.
430
431The extended class is called the "base class" or "super class". The new class
432is called the "child class".
433
434Object members from the base class are all taken over by the child class. It
435is not possible to override them (unlike some other languages).
436
437 *E1356* *E1357* *E1358*
438Object methods of the base class can be overruled. The signature (arguments,
439argument types and return type) must be exactly the same. The method of the
440base class can be called by prefixing "super.".
441
442Other object methods of the base class are taken over by the child class.
443
444Class functions, including functions starting with "new", can be overruled,
445like with object methods. The function on the base class can be called by
446prefixing the name of the class (for class functions) or "super.".
447
448Unlike other languages, the constructor of the base class does not need to be
449invoked. In fact, it cannot be invoked. If some initialization from the base
450class also needs to be done in a child class, put it in an object method and
451call that method from every constructor().
452
453If the base class did not specify a new() function then one was automatically
454created. This function will not be taken over by the child class. The child
455class can define its own new() function, or, if there isn't one, a new()
456function will be added automatically.
457
458
459A class implementing an interface ~
Bram Moolenaar1b5f03e2023-01-09 20:12:45 +0000460 *implements* *E1346* *E1347*
461A class can implement one or more interfaces. The "implements" keyword can
462only appear once *E1350* . Multiple interfaces can be specified, separated by
463commas. Each interface name can appear only once. *E1351*
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +0000464
465
466A class defining an interface ~
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000467 *specifies*
Bram Moolenaar00b28d62022-12-08 15:32:33 +0000468A class can declare its interface, the object members and methods, with a
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000469named interface. This avoids the need for separately specifying the
Bram Moolenaar00b28d62022-12-08 15:32:33 +0000470interface, which is often done in many languages, especially Java.
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000471
472
Bram Moolenaar7db29e42022-12-11 15:53:04 +0000473Items in a class ~
474 *E1318* *E1325* *E1326*
Bram Moolenaardd60c362023-02-27 15:49:53 +0000475Inside a class, in between `:class` and `:endclass`, these items can appear:
Bram Moolenaar7db29e42022-12-11 15:53:04 +0000476- An object member declaration: >
Bram Moolenaar938ae282023-02-20 20:44:55 +0000477 this._memberName: memberType
478 this.memberName: memberType
Bram Moolenaar7db29e42022-12-11 15:53:04 +0000479 public this.memberName: memberType
480- A constructor method: >
Bram Moolenaar938ae282023-02-20 20:44:55 +0000481 def new(arguments)
482 def newName(arguments)
Bram Moolenaar7db29e42022-12-11 15:53:04 +0000483- An object method: >
Bram Moolenaar938ae282023-02-20 20:44:55 +0000484 def SomeMethod(arguments)
Bram Moolenaarf1dcd142022-12-31 15:30:45 +0000485< *E1329*
486For the object member the type must be specified. The best way is to do this
487explicitly with ": {type}". For simple types you can also use an initializer,
488such as "= 123", and Vim will see that the type is a number. Avoid doing this
489for more complex types and when the type will be incomplete. For example: >
490 this.nameList = []
491This specifies a list, but the item type is unknown. Better use: >
492 this.nameList: list<string>
493The initialization isn't needed, the list is empty by default.
494 *E1330*
495Some types cannot be used, such as "void", "null" and "v:none".
Bram Moolenaar7db29e42022-12-11 15:53:04 +0000496
497
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000498Defining an interface ~
499 *:interface* *:endinterface*
500An interface is defined between `:interface` and `:endinterface`. It may be
501prefixed with `:export`: >
502
503 interface InterfaceName
504 endinterface
505
506 export interface InterfaceName
507 endinterface
Bram Moolenaar1b5f03e2023-01-09 20:12:45 +0000508< *E1344*
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000509An interface can declare object members, just like in a class but without any
510initializer.
Bram Moolenaar1b5f03e2023-01-09 20:12:45 +0000511 *E1345*
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000512An interface can declare methods with `:def`, including the arguments and
513return type, but without the body and without `:enddef`. Example: >
514
515 interface HasSurface
516 this.size: number
517 def Surface(): number
518 endinterface
519
Bram Moolenaar1b5f03e2023-01-09 20:12:45 +0000520An interface name must start with an uppercase letter. *E1343*
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000521The "Has" prefix can be used to make it easier to guess this is an interface
522name, with a hint about what it provides.
Bram Moolenaar1b5f03e2023-01-09 20:12:45 +0000523An interface can only be defined in a |Vim9| script file. *E1342*
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000524
525
Bram Moolenaar938ae282023-02-20 20:44:55 +0000526null object ~
527
Bram Moolenaardd60c362023-02-27 15:49:53 +0000528When a variable is declared to have the type of an object, but it is not
Bram Moolenaar938ae282023-02-20 20:44:55 +0000529initialized, the value is null. When trying to use this null object Vim often
530does not know what class was supposed to be used. Vim then cannot check if
531a member name is correct and you will get an "Using a null object" error,
Bram Moolenaar71badf92023-04-22 22:40:14 +0100532even when the member name is invalid. *E1360* *E1362* *E1363*
Bram Moolenaar938ae282023-02-20 20:44:55 +0000533
534
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000535Default constructor ~
536
537In case you define a class without a new() method, one will be automatically
538defined. This default constructor will have arguments for all the object
539members, in the order they were specified. Thus if your class looks like: >
540
541 class AutoNew
542 this.name: string
543 this.age: number
544 this.gender: Gender
545 endclass
546
547Then The default constructor will be: >
548
Bram Moolenaar65b0d162022-12-13 18:43:22 +0000549 def new(this.name = v:none, this.age = v:none, this.gender = v:none)
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000550 enddef
551
Bram Moolenaar65b0d162022-12-13 18:43:22 +0000552The "= v:none" default values make the arguments optional. Thus you can also
553call `new()` without any arguments. No assignment will happen and the default
554value for the object members will be used. This is a more useful example,
555with default values: >
Bram Moolenaar7db29e42022-12-11 15:53:04 +0000556
557 class TextPosition
558 this.lnum: number = 1
559 this.col: number = 1
560 endclass
561
562If you want the constructor to have mandatory arguments, you need to write it
563yourself. For example, if for the AutoNew class above you insist on getting
564the name, you can define the constructor like this: >
565
Bram Moolenaar65b0d162022-12-13 18:43:22 +0000566 def new(this.name, this.age = v:none, this.gender = v:none)
Bram Moolenaar7db29e42022-12-11 15:53:04 +0000567 enddef
Bram Moolenaar65b0d162022-12-13 18:43:22 +0000568< *E1328*
569Note that you cannot use another default value than "v:none" here. If you
570want to initialize the object members, do it where they are declared. This
571way you only need to look in one place for the default values.
Bram Moolenaar7db29e42022-12-11 15:53:04 +0000572
Bram Moolenaar1b5f03e2023-01-09 20:12:45 +0000573All object members will be used in the default constructor, also private
574access ones.
575
576If the class extends another one, the object members of that class will come
577first.
578
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000579
580Multiple constructors ~
581
582Normally a class has just one new() constructor. In case you find that the
583constructor is often called with the same arguments you may want to simplify
584your code by putting those arguments into a second constructor method. For
585example, if you tend to use the color black a lot: >
586
587 def new(this.garment, this.color, this.size)
588 enddef
589 ...
590 var pants = new(Garment.pants, Color.black, "XL")
591 var shirt = new(Garment.shirt, Color.black, "XL")
592 var shoes = new(Garment.shoes, Color.black, "45")
593
594Instead of repeating the color every time you can add a constructor that
595includes it: >
596
597 def newBlack(this.garment, this.size)
598 this.color = Color.black
599 enddef
600 ...
601 var pants = newBlack(Garment.pants, "XL")
602 var shirt = newBlack(Garment.shirt, "XL")
603 var shoes = newBlack(Garment.shoes, "9.5")
604
605Note that the method name must start with "new". If there is no method called
606"new()" then the default constructor is added, even though there are other
607constructor methods.
608
609
610==============================================================================
611
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +00006127. Type definition *Vim9-type* *:type*
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000613
614A type definition is giving a name to a type specification. For Example: >
615
616 :type ListOfStrings list<string>
617
618TODO: more explanation
619
620
621==============================================================================
622
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +00006238. Enum *Vim9-enum* *:enum* *:endenum*
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000624
625An enum is a type that can have one of a list of values. Example: >
626
627 :enum Color
628 White
629 Red
630 Green
631 Blue
632 Black
633 :endenum
634
635TODO: more explanation
636
637
638==============================================================================
639
6409. Rationale
641
642Most of the choices for |Vim9| classes come from popular and recently
643developed languages, such as Java, TypeScript and Dart. The syntax has been
644made to fit with the way Vim script works, such as using `endclass` instead of
645using curly braces around the whole class.
646
647Some common constructs of object-oriented languages were chosen very long ago
648when this kind of programming was still new, and later found to be
649sub-optimal. By this time those constructs were widely used and changing them
650was not an option. In Vim we do have the freedom to make different choices,
651since classes are completely new. We can make the syntax simpler and more
652consistent than what "old" languages use. Without diverting too much, it
653should still mostly look like what you know from existing languages.
654
655Some recently developed languages add all kinds of fancy features that we
656don't need for Vim. But some have nice ideas that we do want to use.
657Thus we end up with a base of what is common in popular languages, dropping
658what looks like a bad idea, and adding some nice features that are easy to
659understand.
660
661The main rules we use to make decisions:
662- Keep it simple.
663- No surprises, mostly do what other languages are doing.
664- Avoid mistakes from the past.
665- Avoid the need for the script writer to consult the help to understand how
666 things work, most things should be obvious.
667- Keep it consistent.
668- Aim at an average size plugin, not at a huge project.
669
670
671Using new() for the constructor ~
672
673Many languages use the class name for the constructor method. A disadvantage
674is that quite often this is a long name. And when changing the class name all
675constructor methods need to be renamed. Not a big deal, but still a
676disadvantage.
677
678Other languages, such as TypeScript, use a specific name, such as
679"constructor()". That seems better. However, using "new" or "new()" to
680create a new object has no obvious relation with "constructor()".
681
682For |Vim9| script using the same method name for all constructors seemed like
683the right choice, and by calling it new() the relation between the caller and
684the method being called is obvious.
685
686
687No overloading of the constructor ~
688
689In Vim script, both legacy and |Vim9| script, there is no overloading of
690functions. That means it is not possible to use the same function name with
691different types of arguments. Therefore there also is only one new()
692constructor.
693
694With |Vim9| script it would be possible to support overloading, since
695arguments are typed. However, this gets complicated very quickly. Looking at
696a new() call one has to inspect the types of the arguments to know which of
697several new() methods is actually being called. And that can require
698inspecting quite a bit of code. For example, if one of the arguments is the
699return value of a method, you need to find that method to see what type it is
700returning.
701
702Instead, every constructor has to have a different name, starting with "new".
703That way multiple constructors with different arguments are possible, while it
704is very easy to see which constructor is being used. And the type of
705arguments can be properly checked.
706
707
708No overloading of methods ~
709
710Same reasoning as for the constructor: It is often not obvious what type
711arguments have, which would make it difficult to figure out what method is
712actually being called. Better just give the methods a different name, then
713type checking will make sure it works as you intended. This rules out
714polymorphism, which we don't really need anyway.
715
716
Bram Moolenaar1b5f03e2023-01-09 20:12:45 +0000717Single inheritance and interfaces ~
718
719Some languages support multiple inheritance. Although that can be useful in
720some cases, it makes the rules of how a class works quite complicated.
721Instead, using interfaces to declare what is supported is much simpler. The
722very popular Java language does it this way, and it should be good enough for
Bram Moolenaarbe4e0162023-02-02 13:59:48 +0000723Vim. The "keep it simple" rule applies here.
Bram Moolenaar1b5f03e2023-01-09 20:12:45 +0000724
725Explicitly declaring that a class supports an interface makes it easy to see
726what a class is intended for. It also makes it possible to do proper type
727checking. When an interface is changed any class that declares to implement
728it will be checked if that change was also changed. The mechanism to assume a
729class implements an interface just because the methods happen to match is
730brittle and leads to obscure problems, let's not do that.
731
732
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000733Using "this.member" everywhere ~
734
735The object members in various programming languages can often be accessed in
736different ways, depending on the location. Sometimes "this." has to be
737prepended to avoid ambiguity. They are usually declared without "this.".
738That is quite inconsistent and sometimes confusing.
739
740A very common issue is that in the constructor the arguments use the same name
741as the object member. Then for these members "this." needs to be prefixed in
742the body, while for other members this is not needed and often omitted. This
743leads to a mix of members with and without "this.", which is inconsistent.
744
745For |Vim9| classes the "this." prefix is always used. Also for declaring the
746members. Simple and consistent. When looking at the code inside a class it's
747also directly clear which variable references are object members and which
748aren't.
749
750
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000751Using class members ~
752
753Using "static member" to declare a class member is very common, nothing new
754here. In |Vim9| script these can be accessed directly by their name. Very
755much like how a script-local variable can be used in a function. Since object
756members are always accessed with "this." prepended, it's also quickly clear
757what kind of member it is.
758
759TypeScript prepends the class name before the class member, also inside the
760class. This has two problems: The class name can be rather long, taking up
761quite a bit of space, and when the class is renamed all these places need to
762be changed too.
763
764
Bram Moolenaar1b5f03e2023-01-09 20:12:45 +0000765Declaring object and class members ~
766
767The main choice is whether to use "var" as with variable declarations.
768TypeScript does not use it: >
769 class Point {
770 x: number;
771 y = 0;
772 }
773
774Following that Vim object members could be declared like this: >
775 class Point
776 this.x: number
777 this.y = 0
778 endclass
779
780Some users pointed out that this looks more like an assignment than a
781declaration. Adding "var" changes that: >
782 class Point
783 var this.x: number
784 var this.y = 0
785 endclass
786
787We also need to be able to declare class members using the "static" keyword.
788There we can also choose to leave out "var": >
789 class Point
790 var this.x: number
791 static count = 0
792 endclass
793
794Or do use it, before "static": >
795 class Point
796 var this.x: number
797 var static count = 0
798 endclass
799
800Or after "static": >
801 class Point
802 var this.x: number
803 static var count = 0
804 endclass
805
806This is more in line with "static def Func()".
807
808There is no clear preference whether to use "var" or not. The two main
809reasons to leave it out are:
8101. TypeScript, Java and other popular languages do not use it.
8112. Less clutter.
812
813
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000814Using "ClassName.new()" to construct an object ~
815
816Many languages use the "new" operator to create an object, which is actually
817kind of strange, since the constructor is defined as a method with arguments,
818not a command. TypeScript also has the "new" keyword, but the method is
819called "constructor()", it is hard to see the relation between the two.
820
821In |Vim9| script the constructor method is called new(), and it is invoked as
822new(), simple and straightforward. Other languages use "new ClassName()",
823while there is no ClassName() method, it's a method by another name in the
824class called ClassName. Quite confusing.
825
826
827Default read access to object members ~
828
829Some users will remark that the access rules for object members are
830asymmetric. Well, that is intentional. Changing a value is a very different
831action than reading a value. The read operation has no side effects, it can
832be done any number of times without affecting the object. Changing the value
833can have many side effects, and even have a ripple effect, affecting other
834objects.
835
836When adding object members one usually doesn't think much about this, just get
837the type right. And normally the values are set in the new() method.
838Therefore defaulting to read access only "just works" in most cases. And when
839directly writing you get an error, which makes you wonder if you actually want
840to allow that. This helps writing code with fewer mistakes.
841
842
Bram Moolenaar00b28d62022-12-08 15:32:33 +0000843Making object members private with an underscore ~
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000844
845When an object member is private, it can only be read and changed inside the
846class (and in sub-classes), then it cannot be used outside of the class.
847Prepending an underscore is a simple way to make that visible. Various
848programming languages have this as a recommendation.
849
850In case you change your mind and want to make the object member accessible
851outside of the class, you will have to remove the underscore everywhere.
852Since the name only appears in the class (and sub-classes) they will be easy
853to find and change.
854
855The other way around is much harder: you can easily prepend an underscore to
856the object member inside the class to make it private, but any usage elsewhere
857you will have to track down and change. You may have to make it a "set"
858method call. This reflects the real world problem that taking away access
859requires work to be done for all places where that access exists.
860
861An alternative would have been using the "private" keyword, just like "public"
862changes the access in the other direction. Well, that's just to reduce the
863number of keywords.
864
865
866No protected object members ~
867
868Some languages provide several ways to control access to object members. The
869most known is "protected", and the meaning varies from language to language.
870Others are "shared", "private" and even "friend".
871
872These rules make life more difficult. That can be justified in projects where
873many people work on the same, complex code where it is easy to make mistakes.
874Especially when refactoring or other changes to the class model.
875
876The Vim scripts are expected to be used in a plugin, with just one person or a
877small team working on it. Complex rules then only make it more complicated,
Bram Moolenaar71badf92023-04-22 22:40:14 +0100878the extra safety provided by the rules isn't really needed. Let's just keep
879it simple and not specify access details.
Bram Moolenaarc1c365c2022-12-04 20:13:24 +0000880
881
882==============================================================================
883
88410. To be done later
885
886Can a newSomething() constructor invoke another constructor? If yes, what are
887the restrictions?
888
889Thoughts:
890- Generics for a class: `class <Tkey, Tentry>`
891- Generics for a function: `def <Tkey> GetLast(key: Tkey)`
892- Mixins: not sure if that is useful, leave out for simplicity.
893
894Some things that look like good additions:
895- For testing: Mock mechanism
896
897An important class to be provided is "Promise". Since Vim is single
898threaded, connecting asynchronous operations is a natural way of allowing
899plugins to do their work without blocking the user. It's a uniform way to
900invoke callbacks and handle timeouts and errors.
901
902
903 vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl: