CSC/ECE 517 Fall 2010/ch3 1c AE
Reflective Language Features vs. Reflective Packages
Definition
Reflection is the integral quality of a program to dynamically manipulate its own state. (i.e.,) the program can infer and modify itself by making use of its representation of its own self-accessible state(implementation, structure and all aspects). The program takes itself as its domain to be acted upon. It contains metadata and associated operations to manipulate the metadata in runtime. Programming languages that possess this quality are said to be reflective.
Consider the following simple example:
public class HelloWorld {
public void printName() { System.out.println(this.getClass().getName()); }
} The line (new HelloWorld()).printName(); sends the string HelloWorld to standard out. Now let x be an instance of HelloWorld or one of its subclasses. The line x.printName(); sends the string naming the class to standard out.
This small example is more dramatic than it seems—it contains each of the steps previously mentioned. The printName method examines the object for its class (this.getClass()). In doing so, the decision of what to print is made by delegating to the object's class. The method acts on this decision by printing the returned name. Without being overridden, the printName method behaves differently for each subclass than it does for HelloWorld. The printName method is flexible; it adapts to the class that inherits it, causing the change in behavior.
Reflection is a valuable language feature to facilitate metaprogramming. A reflective system shall allow programmers to create new metalevel objects and selectively substitute them for an existing part of the running system. Those programs become their own meta language. Thus, reflection is writing programs that manipulate other programs or themselves.
Pros and cons of reflection
Reflective mechanisms
Types of reflection like introspection, intercession, structural & behavioral -- Reflection at Different Stages of the Program Lifecycle
Reflective languages
Languages like LISP, CLOS, etc
Reflection in OO like JAVA
OO-languages (java ‘s reflex package, C#’s, C++’s, etc) Java is so well crafted and its reflection API so carefully constrained that security is controlled simply. By learning when to use reflection and when not to, you will avoid unnecessarily complex code that can often be the result of amateurish use of reflection. In addition, you will learn to evaluate the performance of your designs, thereby ensuring the resulting code satisfies its performance requirements.
This introduction describes reflection, but scarcely reveals its value in this limited space. This article and the next will cover:
Reflection basics Class fundamentals Using methods reflectively
References
http://www.springerlink.com/content/6l63883r9224q186/ http://www.cs.indiana.edu/~jsobel/rop.html http://publications.csail.mit.edu/lcs/pubs/pdf/MIT-LCS-TR-272.pdf http://www.di.uniovi.es/ooosws2001/papers/ortin_final.pdf http://download.oracle.com/javase/1.4.2/docs/api/java/lang/reflect/package-summary.html http://scg.unibe.ch/archive/papers/Duca06dMOOSEMODELS2006.pdf file:///C:/Users/Summer/Downloads/10.1.1.158.2012.pdf - good link .. http://www.ub.uni-konstanz.de/kops/volltexte/2002/803/pdf/DissertationEgbertAlthammer.pdf http://www.laputan.org/reflection/ooffrmla.html