Reflect.get()
Baseline Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since September 2016.
The Reflect.get()
static method is like the property accessor syntax, but as a function.
Try it
Syntax
Reflect.get(target, propertyKey)
Reflect.get(target, propertyKey, receiver)
Parameters
target
-
The target object on which to get the property.
propertyKey
-
The name of the property to get.
receiver
Optional-
The value of
this
provided for the call totarget
if a getter is encountered.
Return value
The value of the property.
Exceptions
TypeError
-
Thrown if
target
is not an object.
Description
Reflect.get()
provides the reflective semantic of a property access. That is, Reflect.get(target, propertyKey, receiver)
is semantically equivalent to:
target[propertyKey];
Note that in a normal property access, target
and receiver
would observably be the same object.
Reflect.get()
invokes the [[Get]]
object internal method of target
.
Examples
Using Reflect.get()
// Object
const obj1 = { x: 1, y: 2 };
Reflect.get(obj1, "x"); // 1
// Array
Reflect.get(["zero", "one"], 1); // "one"
// Proxy with a get handler
const obj2 = new Proxy(
{ p: 1 },
{
get(t, k, r) {
return k + "bar";
},
},
);
Reflect.get(obj2, "foo"); // "foobar"
// Proxy with get handler and receiver
const obj3 = new Proxy(
{ p: 1, foo: 2 },
{
get(t, prop, receiver) {
return receiver[prop] + "bar";
},
},
);
Reflect.get(obj3, "foo", { foo: 3 }); // "3bar"
Specifications
Specification |
---|
ECMAScript Language Specification # sec-reflect.get |
Browser compatibility
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