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dnaof

0.0.7 • Public • Published

dnaof

kindof(), .can., dnaof() - inheritance made easy

Ever struggled with prototype inheritance? Ever wandered why examples of inheritance do not show inheritance deeper than one level? Want it quick, easy and painless?

kindof() -- creates a new kind (you might want to call it a class or a type)

.can. -- assign a new ability to a kind (method, function)

dnaof() -- call the ancestor method (aka the inherited or super)

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EXAMPLE

Demonstrate creation of kinds, creating and calling both overloaded and not overloaded methods.

OUTPUT

bob can chat
alice can chat, alice can talk
candy can chat, candy can talk, candy can discuss
bzzzz.z.z.z... (alice)
bzzzz.z.z.z... (bob)
bzzzz.z.z.z... (candy)

CODE

require('./dnaof')

// create a kind of idiot without ancestor:

var idiot = kindof()
// tell what it can do:

idiot.can.say = function() { return this.name + ' can chat' }
idiot.can.rest = function() { console.log('bzzzz.z.z.z... (' + this.name + ')') }

// a new kind of smart inherits from a kind of idiot

var smart = kindof(idiot)

// he can also say something:

smart.can.say = function() {
	// he can say something new, and he can say the same thing as an idiot can:
	return dnaof(this) + ' and talk'
}

// a kind of a genious can do the same things as an idiot and smart can, and even more:

var genious = kindof(smart)
genious.can.init = function(name) { this.name = name }
genious.can.say = function() {
	return dnaof(this) + ' and even discuss'
}

// you must use .create(), not "new"

var alice = idiot.create()
var betty = smart.create()
var carol = genious.create('Carol')

alice.name = 'Alice'
betty.name = 'Betty'

// let them talk:

console.log(alice.say())
console.log(betty.say())
console.log(carol.say())

// let them take some rest:

alice.rest(), betty.rest(), carol.rest()

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