For example I have two ArrayCollection’s – firstAC and secondAC. If I do secondAC = firstAC, and than I make changes to secondAC (prehaps put a filterfunction on it) it somehow propagates to firstAC, would anyone tell me why that happens in Flex or Actionscript 3?
What can I do if I only want secondAC to get all data from firstAC but then when I make changes to secondAC it does not show in firstAC?
Thanxs a bunch for answers!
Ladislav
In ECMAScript languages (AS1-3, JavaScript, et al.), when you use
what you are really saying is “foo now points to the same object as that other variable.” This means that in this situation, both arrays will be the same value:
This also works for functions:
and it even works with XML:
This is called “passing by reference” instead of “passing by value” or “passing by copy”. It means that every time that an item is referenced, each variable will point to the same object.
There are many ways to get around this, and most of them depend on your context. For arrays, my favorite is Array.concat(), which returns a literal clone of the array. This means that anything I do to the returned value will not effect the original in any way. If I’m dealing with XML, however, I will do something like:
var xml2:XML = XML( xml.toXMLString() );.In your case, I would actually recommend that you use:
This has the major benefits of not only being faster (it relies on compiled code instead of Flex SDK code and it also does not first instantiate a new array and then re-populate it), but it also has the distinct benefit of being available in older versions of Flex 3’s SDK — it is entirely backwards compatible.