Proxy

The Proxy object enables you to create a proxy for another object, which can intercept and redefine fundamental operations for that object.

Description

The Proxy object allows you to create an object that can be used in place of the original object, but which may redefine fundamental Object operations like getting, setting, and defining properties. Proxy objects are commonly used to log property accesses, validate, format, or sanitize inputs, and so on.

You create a Proxy with two parameters:

  • target: the original object which you want to proxy
  • handler: an object that defines which operations will be intercepted and how to redefine intercepted operations.

For example, this code defines a simple target with just two properties, and an even simpler handler with no properties:

const target = {
  message1: "hello",
  message2: "everyone"
};

const handler1 = {};

const proxy1 = new Proxy(target, handler1);

Because the handler is empty, this proxy behaves just like the original target:

console.log(proxy1.message1); // hello
console.log(proxy1.message2); // everyone

To customize the proxy, we define functions on the handler object:

const target = {
  message1: "hello",
  message2: "everyone"
};

const handler2 = {
  get(target, prop, receiver) {
    return "world";
  }
};

const proxy2 = new Proxy(target, handler2);

Here we've provided an implementation of the get() handler, which intercepts attempts to access properties in the target.

Handler functions are sometimes called traps, presumably because they trap calls to the target object. The very simple trap in handler2 above redefines all property accessors:

console.log(proxy2.message1); // world
console.log(proxy2.message2); // world

With the help of the Reflect class we can give some accessors the original behavior and redefine others:

const target = {
  message1: "hello",
  message2: "everyone"
};

const handler3 = {
  get(target, prop, receiver) {
    if (prop === "message2") {
      return "world";
    }
    return Reflect.get(...arguments);
  },
};

const proxy3 = new Proxy(target, handler3);

console.log(proxy3.message1); // hello
console.log(proxy3.message2); // world

Constructor

Proxy()

Creates a new Proxy object.

Static methods

Proxy.revocable()

Creates a revocable Proxy object.

Examples

Basic example

In this simple example, the number 37 gets returned as the default value when the property name is not in the object. It is using the get() handler.

const handler = {
  get(obj, prop) {
    return prop in obj ?
      obj[prop] :
      37;
  }
};

const p = new Proxy({}, handler);
p.a = 1;
p.b = undefined;

console.log(p.a, p.b);
//  1, undefined

console.log('c' in p, p.c);
//  false, 37

No-op forwarding proxy

In this example, we are using a native JavaScript object to which our proxy will forward all operations that are applied to it.

const target = {};
const p = new Proxy(target, {});

p.a = 37;
//  operation forwarded to the target

console.log(target.a);
//  37
//  (The operation has been properly forwarded!)

Note that while this "no-op" works for JavaScript objects, it does not work for native browser objects like DOM Elements.

Validation

With a Proxy, you can easily validate the passed value for an object. This example uses the set() handler.

let validator = {
  set(obj, prop, value) {
    if (prop === 'age') {
      if (!Number.isInteger(value)) {
        throw new TypeError('The age is not an integer');
      }
      if (value > 200) {
        throw new RangeError('The age seems invalid');
      }
    }

    // The default behavior to store the value
    obj[prop] = value;

    // Indicate success
    return true;
  }
};

const person = new Proxy({}, validator);

person.age = 100;
console.log(person.age); // 100
person.age = 'young';    // Throws an exception
person.age = 300;        // Throws an exception

Extending constructor

A function proxy could easily extend a constructor with a new constructor. This example uses the construct() and apply() handlers.

function extend(sup, base) {
  base.prototype = Object.create(sup.prototype);
  base.prototype.constructor = new Proxy(base, {
    construct: function(target, args) {
      var obj = Object.create(base.prototype);
      this.apply(target, obj, args);
      return obj;
    },
    apply: function(target, that, args) {
      sup.apply(that, args);
      base.apply(that, args);
    }
  });
  return base.prototype.constructor;
}

var Person = function(name) {
  this.name = name;
};

var Boy = extend(Person, function(name, age) {
  this.age = age;
});

Boy.prototype.gender = 'M';

var Peter = new Boy('Peter', 13);

console.log(Peter.gender);  // "M"
console.log(Peter.name);    // "Peter"
console.log(Peter.age);     // 13

Manipulating DOM nodes

In this example we use Proxy to toggle an attribute of two different elements: so when we set the attribute on one element, the attribute is unset on the other one.

We create a view object which is a proxy for an object with a selected property. The proxy handler defines the set() handler.

When we assign an HTML element to view.selected, the element's 'aria-selected' attribute is set to true. If we then assign a different element to view.selected, this element's 'aria-selected' attribute is set to true and the previous element's 'aria-selected' attribute is automatically set to false.

const view = new Proxy({
  selected: null
},
{
  set(obj, prop, newval) {
    let oldval = obj[prop];

    if (prop === 'selected') {
      if (oldval) {
        oldval.setAttribute('aria-selected', 'false');
      }
      if (newval) {
        newval.setAttribute('aria-selected', 'true');
      }
    }

    // The default behavior to store the value
    obj[prop] = newval;

    // Indicate success
    return true;
  }
});

const item1 = document.getElementById('item-1');
const item2 = document.getElementById('item-2');

// select item1:
view.selected = item1;

console.log(`item1: ${item1.getAttribute('aria-selected')}`);
// item1: true

// selecting item2 de-selects item1:
view.selected = item2;

console.log(`item1: ${item1.getAttribute('aria-selected')}`);
// item1: false

console.log(`item2: ${item2.getAttribute('aria-selected')}`);
// item2: true

Value correction and an extra property

The products proxy object evaluates the passed value and converts it to an array if needed. The object also supports an extra property called latestBrowser both as a getter and a setter.

let products = new Proxy({
  browsers: ['Internet Explorer', 'Netscape']
},
{
  get(obj, prop) {
    // An extra property
    if (prop === 'latestBrowser') {
      return obj.browsers[obj.browsers.length - 1];
    }

    // The default behavior to return the value
    return obj[prop];
  },
  set(obj, prop, value) {
    // An extra property
    if (prop === 'latestBrowser') {
      obj.browsers.push(value);
      return true;
    }

    // Convert the value if it is not an array
    if (typeof value === 'string') {
      value = [value];
    }

    // The default behavior to store the value
    obj[prop] = value;

    // Indicate success
    return true;
  }
});

console.log(products.browsers);
//  ['Internet Explorer', 'Netscape']

products.browsers = 'Firefox';
//  pass a string (by mistake)

console.log(products.browsers);
//  ['Firefox'] <- no problem, the value is an array

products.latestBrowser = 'Chrome';

console.log(products.browsers);
//  ['Firefox', 'Chrome']

console.log(products.latestBrowser);
//  'Chrome'

Finding an array item object by its property

This proxy extends an array with some utility features. As you see, you can flexibly "define" properties without using Object.defineProperties(). This example can be adapted to find a table row by its cell. In that case, the target will be table.rows.

let products = new Proxy([
  { name: 'Firefox', type: 'browser' },
  { name: 'SeaMonkey', type: 'browser' },
  { name: 'Thunderbird', type: 'mailer' }
],
{
  get(obj, prop) {
    // The default behavior to return the value; prop is usually an integer
    if (prop in obj) {
      return obj[prop];
    }

    // Get the number of products; an alias of products.length
    if (prop === 'number') {
      return obj.length;
    }

    let result, types = {};

    for (let product of obj) {
      if (product.name === prop) {
        result = product;
      }
      if (types[product.type]) {
        types[product.type].push(product);
      } else {
        types[product.type] = [product];
      }
    }

    // Get a product by name
    if (result) {
      return result;
    }

    // Get products by type
    if (prop in types) {
      return types[prop];
    }

    // Get product types
    if (prop === 'types') {
      return Object.keys(types);
    }

    return undefined;
  }
});

console.log(products[0]);          // { name: 'Firefox', type: 'browser' }
console.log(products['Firefox']);  // { name: 'Firefox', type: 'browser' }
console.log(products['Chrome']);   // undefined
console.log(products.browser);     // [{ name: 'Firefox', type: 'browser' }, { name: 'SeaMonkey', type: 'browser' }]
console.log(products.types);       // ['browser', 'mailer']
console.log(products.number);      // 3

A complete traps list example

Now in order to create a complete sample traps list, for didactic purposes, we will try to proxify a non-native object that is particularly suited to this type of operation: the docCookies global object created by a simple cookie framework.

/*
  var docCookies = ... get the "docCookies" object here:
  https://reference.codeproject.com/dom/document/cookie/simple_document.cookie_framework
*/

var docCookies = new Proxy(docCookies, {
  get (oTarget, sKey) {
    return oTarget[sKey] || oTarget.getItem(sKey) || undefined;
  },
  set: function (oTarget, sKey, vValue) {
    if (sKey in oTarget) { return false; }
    return oTarget.setItem(sKey, vValue);
  },
  deleteProperty: function (oTarget, sKey) {
    if (!sKey in oTarget) { return false; }
    return oTarget.removeItem(sKey);
  },
  ownKeys: function (oTarget, sKey) {
    return oTarget.keys();
  },
  has: function (oTarget, sKey) {
    return sKey in oTarget || oTarget.hasItem(sKey);
  },
  defineProperty: function (oTarget, sKey, oDesc) {
    if (oDesc && 'value' in oDesc) { oTarget.setItem(sKey, oDesc.value); }
    return oTarget;
  },
  getOwnPropertyDescriptor: function (oTarget, sKey) {
    var vValue = oTarget.getItem(sKey);
    return vValue ? {
      value: vValue,
      writable: true,
      enumerable: true,
      configurable: false
    } : undefined;
  },
});

/* Cookies test */

console.log(docCookies.my_cookie1 = 'First value');
console.log(docCookies.getItem('my_cookie1'));

docCookies.setItem('my_cookie1', 'Changed value');
console.log(docCookies.my_cookie1);

Specifications

Specification
ECMAScript Language Specification
# sec-proxy-objects

Browser compatibility

BCD tables only load in the browser

See also