$ npm install harmony-reflect
This is a shim for the ECMAScript 6 Reflect and Proxy objects.
This library does two things:
Reflect
global object that exports the ECMAScript 6 reflection API.Proxy
support is available, it patches Proxy
to be up-to-date with the ES6 spec.July 2016 update: the most recent version of all major browsers and node.js now support fully
ES6-compliant Reflect
and Proxy
objects. This shim is primarily useful if you want ES6 Reflect
support on older browsers or versions of node.js < v6.0.0, or if you want
ES6 Proxy
support on versions of node.js < v6.0.0.
May 2016 update: the recently released V8 v4.9 includes native support for ES2015 Proxies and Reflect, making this library obsolete for environments that embed V8 4.9 or newer (like Chrome 49 and Node v6.0). Node v5.10.x or lower still requires this polyfill for proper ES6 Proxy support.
Read Why should I use this library?
For node.js, install via npm:
npm install harmony-reflect
Then:
node --harmony-proxies
> var Reflect = require('harmony-reflect');
See release notes for changes to the npm releases.
To use in a browser, just download the single reflect.js file. After loading
<script src="reflect.js"></script>
a global object Reflect
is defined that contains reflection methods as defined in the ES6 spec.
This library also updates the "harmony-era" Proxy
object in the V8 engine
(also used in node.js) to follow the latest ECMAScript 2015 spec.
To create such a proxy, call:
var proxy = new Proxy(target, handler);
See below for a list of spec incompatibilities and other gotcha's.
This module exports an object named Reflect
and updates the global Proxy
object (if it exists) to be compatible with the latest ECMAScript 6 spec.
The ECMAScript 6 Proxy API allows one to intercept various operations on Javascript objects.
The Reflect
API, with support for proxies, was tested on:
node --harmony_proxies
(>= v0.7.8)iojs --harmony_proxies
(>= 2.3.0)v8 --harmony_proxies
(>= v3.6)js
spidermonkey shellIf you need only Reflect
and not an up-to-date Proxy
object, this
library should work on any modern ES5 engine (including all browsers).
Compatibility notes:
chrome://flags/#enable-javascript-harmony
) but Chrome v38 removed the Proxy
constructor. As a result, this library cannot patch the harmony-era Proxy
object on Chrome v38 or above. If you're working with Chromium directly, it's still possible to enable proxies using chromium-browser --js-flags="--harmony_proxies"
.Proxy
constructor was enabled by
default when starting V8 with --harmony
. For recent versions of V8,
Proxy
must be explicitly enabled with --harmony_proxies
.After loading reflect.js
into your page or other JS environment, be aware that the following globals are patched to be able to recognize emulated direct proxies:
Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptor
Object.defineProperty
Object.defineProperties
Object.getOwnPropertyNames
Object.getOwnPropertySymbols
Object.keys
Object.{get,set}PrototypeOf
Object.assign
Object.{freeze,seal,preventExtensions}
Object.{isFrozen,isSealed,isExtensible}
Object.prototype.valueOf
Object.prototype.isPrototypeOf
Object.prototype.toString
Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty
Function.prototype.toString
Date.prototype.toString
Array.isArray
Array.prototype.concat
Proxy
Reflect
:warning: In node.js, when you require('harmony-reflect')
, only the current
module's globals are patched. If you pass an emulated direct proxy to an external module, and that module uses the unpatched globals, the module may not interact with the proxy according to the latest ES6 Proxy API, instead falling
back on the old pre-ES6 Proxy API. This can cause bugs, e.g. the built-in Array.isArray
will return false
when passed a proxy-for-array, while the
patched Array.isArray
will return true. I know of no good fix to reliably patch the globals for all node modules. If you do, let me know.
The examples directory contains a number of examples demonstrating the use of proxies:
Object.observe
notification mechanism.Other example uses of proxies (not done by me, but using this library):
For more examples of proxies, and a good overview of their design rationale, I recommend reading Axel Rauschmayer's blog post on proxies.
The sister project proxy-handlers defines a number of predefined Proxy handlers as "abstract classes" that your code can "subclass" The goal is to minimize the number of traps that your proxy handlers must implement.
This library differs from the ECMAScript 2016 spec as follows:
enumerate()
trap, and the corresponding Reflect.enumerate()
method, have been removed.
This shim still supports the trap.This library differs from the ECMAScript 2015 spec as follows:
In ES6, Proxy
is a constructor function that requires the use
of new
. That is, you must write new Proxy(target, handler)
. This library
exports Proxy
as an ordinary function which may be called with or without using the new
operator.
In ES6, Function.prototype.toString
and Date.prototype.toString
do not
operate transparently on Proxies. This shim patches those functions so that
stringifying a Proxy-for-a-function or a Proxy-for-a-date "unwraps" the
proxy and instead stringifies the target of the Proxy. This behavior may
change in the future to be more spec-compatible.
This library does not shim Symbol objects. On modern V8 or io.js which supports Symbol objects natively, due to a bug in V8, Symbols and Proxies don't play well together. Read more.
Proxies-for-arrays are serialized as JSON objects rather than as JSON arrays. That is, JSON.stringify(new Proxy([], {}))
returns "{}" rather than "[]". Read more.
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