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From smalltalk to javascript and back
Amber maps one to one with the JavaScript equivalent:
- String ⇔ String
- Number ⇔ Number
- Boolean ⇔ Boolean
- BlockClosure ⇔ function
- Error ⇔ Error
- etc.
You can easily access JavaScript objects directly from Amber and access their properties or call functions:
-
someUser.namebecomessomeUser name -
someUser.name = "John"becomessomeUser name: 'John' -
console.log('hello world')becomesconsole log: 'hello world' -
window.jQuery('foo').css('background', 'red')becomes(window jQuery: 'foo') css: 'background' color: 'red'
For keyword selectors, only the first keyword matters, all the other keywords will be ignored. That means our previous example could have been: (window jQuery: 'foo') css: 'background' set: 'red'
Note that you can inspect, print, etc javaScript objects from Amber.
For example, you can inspect the window object.
Sometimes you need to create an inline JS object, for example as an argument to this splitter() function:
$("#MySplitter").splitter({
splitVertical: true,
sizeLeft: true
});
In 99% of these cases, you can simulate the object with a HashedCollection like so:
'#MySplitter' asJQuery splitter: #{
'splitVertical' -> true.
'sizeLeft' -> true
}
The globals collection is the entry point for accessing Smalltalk objects.
Inside the loader, globals can be accessed via the argument to the callback. For example
require(['app'], function (amber) {
//...
amber.globals.Object;
});
From anywhere else, use require("amber/helpers").globals.
Amber also makes it easy to send messages to Smalltalk objects from JavaScript:
- Unary messages begin with an underscore:
yourselfbecomes_yourself() - Binary messages are prefixed with 2 underscores:
3@4becomes(3).__at(4) - Keyword messages follow the same rules as unary messages but with single underscores and a final underscore:
aDictionary at: 3 put: 4becomesaDictionary._at_put_(3, 4)
A Smalltalk instance variable is accessed from within JavaScript as self['@name'].