Methods: Difference between revisions
>Flurite Created page with "Methods are unique functions which belong to a particular object or can be custom made. Although standard Lua doesn't have them, they're a major focus of Roblox Lua. Some com..." |
>Flurite Created page with "Methods are unique functions which belong to a particular object or can be custom made. Although standard Lua doesn't have them, they're a major focus of Roblox Lua. Some com..." |
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Revision as of 20:28, 23 January 2012
Methods are unique functions which belong to a particular object or can be custom made. Although standard Lua doesn't have them, they're a major focus of Roblox Lua. Some common examples of methods include 'Destroy()', 'Clone()', and 'FindFirstChild()'. You can find a full list of methods here.
Methods act like a function stored within an object. The method itself is accessed in the same way a function in a table is accessed. However, a special property of methods changes how they are called.
These two lines of code are equivalent, calling the function a
with the parameter <a>b.
b.a(b) b:a()
The second is briefer and more concise. Methods can increase typing speed, because there is less need to retype variable names.
Making your own
Making your own methods can
- Make your code look cool
- Make your tables more dynamic
First, we need a table to apply the method to. I'm going to make a checkbox. It doesn't actually do anything, but it's an application example. Feel free to make this work.
Checkbox = { Checked = false, CheckedImage = "Image", UncheckedImage = "Image", ImageButton = ..., ChangeState = function(self) self.Checked = not self.Checked end } Checkbox.ImageButton.MouseButton1Down:connect(function() Checkbox:ChangeState() end)
You might think you could type
Checkbox.ImageButton.MouseButton1Down:connect(Checkbox.ChangeState)
However, that would call Checkbox.ChangeState(x, y)
when the event fired. We need to call Checkbox.ChangeState(Checkbox)
.
When you call a function as a method, you automatically pass an argument as the TABLE ITSELF. For example,
function ReturnTable(Num) return { Num, PrintNum = function(self) print(self.Num) end } end
Tabl = ReturnTable(5) Tabl:PrintNum()
That will output 5 because we passed in the table, so the function will receive the table it's located in. Because we called it as a method, it passed "Tabl" as an argument. You can do it with a dot, but it looks kind of stupid:
Tabl.PrintNum(Tabl)