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			207 lines
		
	
	
		
			6.0 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			JavaScript
		
	
	
		
			Executable File
		
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			207 lines
		
	
	
		
			6.0 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			JavaScript
		
	
	
		
			Executable File
		
	
	
	
	
| /**********************************************************************
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| * 
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| *
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| *
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| **********************************************************************/
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| 
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| define(function(require){ var module = {}
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| 
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| //var DEBUG = DEBUG != null ? DEBUG : true
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| 
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| 
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| 
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| /*********************************************************************/
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| 
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| 
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| // Make a JavaScrip object constructor...	
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| //
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| //
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| // 	Make a constructor with an object prototype...
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| // 		makeConstructor(<name>, <proto>)
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| // 			-> constructor
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| //
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| // 	Make a constructor with an init function prototype...
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| // 		makeConstructor(<name>, <init-func>)
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| // 			-> constructor
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| //
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| // 	Make a constructor with a prototype (object/function) and a class
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| // 	prototype...
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| // 		makeConstructor(<name>, <proto>, <class-proto>)
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| // 		makeConstructor(<name>, <init-func>, <class-proto>)
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| // 			-> constructor
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| // 			NOTE: the <class-proto> defines a set of class methods and 
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| // 					attributes.
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| //
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| //
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| //
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| // The resulting constructor can produce objects in one of these ways:
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| //
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| // 	Basic constructor use...
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| // 		constructor()
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| // 		new constructor
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| // 		new constructor()
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| // 			-> instance
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| //
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| // 	Pass arguments to the constructor...
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| // 		constructor(<arg>[, ...])
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| // 		new constructor(<arg>[, ...])
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| // 			-> instance
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| //
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| //
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| // All produced objects are instances of the constructor
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| // 		instance instanceof constructor
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| // 			-> true
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| //
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| //
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| //
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| // Init protocol:
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| // 	1) the base instance object is prepared (.__proto__ is set)
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| // 	2) if <init-func> is present, then it is called with instance as 
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| // 		context and passed the constructor arguments
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| // 	3) if <proto>.__init__(..) is present, it is called with the instance
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| // 		as context and passed the constructor arguments.
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| //
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| //
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| //
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| // Inheritance:
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| // 	A simple way to build C -> B -> A chain would be:
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| //
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| // 		var A = makeConstructor('A', {})
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| //
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| // 		// NOTE: the prototype is an instance and not a constructor,
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| // 		//		this is obvious if one considers that in JS there are
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| // 		//		no classes and inheritance is done via object prototypes
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| // 		//		but this might be a gotcha to people coming from the 
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| // 		//		class-object world.
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| // 		var B = makeConstructor('B', A())
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| //
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| // 		var C = makeConstructor('C', B())
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| //
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| // 		var c = C()
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| //
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| // 		c instanceof C		// -> true
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| // 		c instanceof B		// -> true
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| // 		c instanceof A		// -> true
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| //
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| // 		A.prototype.x = 123
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| //
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| // 		c.x 				// -> 123
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| //
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| //
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| //
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| // Motivation:
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| // 	The general motivation here is to standardise the constructor protocol
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| // 	and make a single simple way to go with minimal variation. This is due
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| // 	to the JavaScript base protocol though quite simple, being too flexible
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| // 	making it very involved to produce objects in a consistent manner by 
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| // 	hand, especially in long running projects, in turn spreading all the 
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| // 	refactoring over multiple sites and styles.
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| //
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| // 	This removes part of the flexibility and in return gives us:
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| // 		- single, well defined protocol
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| // 		- one single spot where all the "magic" happens
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| // 		- full support for existing JavaScript ways of doing things
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| // 		- easy refactoring without touching the client code
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| //
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| //
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| // XXX might be a good idea to be able to make an instance without 
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| // 		initializing it...
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| // 		...mainly for inheritance.
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| // 		...would also be helpful in this case to call all the 
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| // 		constructors in the chain
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| var makeConstructor =
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| module.makeConstructor =
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| function makeConstructor(name, a, b){
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| 	var proto = b == null ? a : b
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| 	var cls_proto = b == null ? b : a
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| 
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| 	var _constructor = function Constructor(){
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| 		/*
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| 		// XXX BUG: if the constructor is called from it's instance this will 
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| 		// 		return the instance and not a new object...
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| 		// in case this is called as a function (without new)...
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| 		if(this.constructor !== _constructor){
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| 			// NOTE: the following does the job of the 'new' operator but
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| 			// 		with one advantage, we can now pass arbitrary args 
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| 			// 		in...
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| 			// 		This is equivalent to:
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| 			//			return new _constructor(json)
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| 			var obj = {}
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| 			obj.__proto__ = _constructor.prototype
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| 			// XXX for some reason this does not resolve from .__proto__
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| 			obj.constructor = _constructor
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| 			//obj.__proto__.constructor = _constructor
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| 
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| 		} else {
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| 			var obj = this
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| 		}
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| 		*/
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| 
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| 		// NOTE: the following does the job of the 'new' operator but
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| 		// 		with one advantage, we can now pass arbitrary args 
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| 		// 		in...
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| 		// 		This is equivalent to:
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| 		//			return new _constructor(json)
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| 		var obj = {}
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| 		obj.__proto__ = _constructor.prototype
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| 		// XXX for some reason this does not resolve from .__proto__
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| 		// XXX this also is a regular attr and not a prop...
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| 		//obj.constructor = _constructor
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| 		Object.defineProperty(obj, 'constructor', {
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| 			value: _constructor,
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| 			enumerable: false,
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| 		})
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| 		//obj.__proto__.constructor = _constructor
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| 
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| 		// explicit init...
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| 		if(proto instanceof Function){
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| 			proto.apply(obj, arguments)
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| 		}
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| 
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| 		// load initial state...
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| 		if(obj.__init__ != null){
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| 			obj.__init__.apply(obj, arguments)
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| 		}
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| 
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| 		return obj
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| 	}
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| 
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| 	// this is here to make Chrome output more user friendly...
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| 	// skip for IE...
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| 	if(_constructor.name == 'Constructor'){
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| 			// skip for chrome app...
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| 			//&& !(window.chrome && chrome.runtime && chrome.runtime.id)){
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| 		eval('_constructor = '+ _constructor
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| 				.toString()
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| 				.replace(/Constructor/g, name))
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| 	}
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| 
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| 	_constructor.__proto__ = cls_proto
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| 	_constructor.prototype = proto
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| 	_constructor.prototype.constructor = _constructor
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| 
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| 	return _constructor
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| }
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| 
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| 
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| // super equivalent...
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| //
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| // 	superMethod(<class>, <method-name>).call(this, ...)
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| // 		-> <result>
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| //
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| // This will return a next method in inheritance chain after <class> by
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| // its name (<method-name>).
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| // In the normal use-case <class> is the current class and <method-name>
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| // is the name of the current method.
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| var superMethod =
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| module.superMethod =
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| function superMethod(cls, meth){
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| 	return cls.prototype.__proto__[meth]
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| }
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| 
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| 
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| 
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| /**********************************************************************
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| * vim:set ts=4 sw=4 :                                                */
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| return module })
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