WebAssembly.Table.prototype.set()
Baseline Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since October 2017.
The set()
prototype method of the WebAssembly.Table
object mutates a reference stored at a given index to a different value.
Syntax
set(index, value)
Parameters
index
-
The index of the function reference you want to mutate.
value
-
The value you want to mutate the reference to. This must be a value of the table's element type. Depending on the type, it may be an exported WebAssembly function, a JavaScript wrapper for an underlying Wasm function, or a host reference.
Return value
None (undefined
).
Exceptions
- If
index
is greater than or equal toTable.prototype.length
, aRangeError
is thrown. - If
value
is not of the element type of the table, aTypeError
is thrown.
Examples
Using Table.set
The following example (see table2.html source code and live version) creates a new WebAssembly Table instance with an initial size of two references. We then print out the table length and contents of the two indexes (retrieved via Table.prototype.get()
) to show that the length is two, and the indexes currently contain no function references (they currently return null
).
const tbl = new WebAssembly.Table({ initial: 2, element: "anyfunc" });
console.log(tbl.length);
console.log(tbl.get(0));
console.log(tbl.get(1));
We then create an import object that contains a reference to the table:
const importObj = {
js: { tbl },
};
Finally, we load and instantiate a Wasm module (table2.wasm) using WebAssembly.instantiateStreaming()
, print the table length, and invoke the two referenced functions that are now stored in the table. The table2.wasm
module adds two function references to the table, both of which print out a simple value (see text representation:
WebAssembly.instantiateStreaming(fetch("table2.wasm"), importObject).then(
(obj) => {
console.log(tbl.length);
console.log(tbl.get(0)());
console.log(tbl.get(1)());
},
);
Note how you've got to include a second function invocation operator at the end of the accessor to actually invoke the referenced function and log the value stored inside it (e.g. get(0)()
rather than get(0)
).
This example shows that we're creating and accessing the table from JavaScript, but the same table is visible and callable inside the Wasm instance, too.
Specifications
Specification |
---|
WebAssembly JavaScript Interface # dom-table-set |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser