I am porting some Java-code to Dart and it heavily uses these kinds of maps:
Map<Class<? extends SomeClass>, SomeOtherClass> map = new HashMap<>();
At the moment this seems to be impossible in dart. I am aware that there is a proposal to introduce first level types: http://news.dartlang.org/2012/06/proposal-for-first-class-types-in-dart.html which would introduce
class Type {
@native String toString();
String descriptor(){...} // return the simple name of the type
}
So until this proposal gets implemented I have created following class:
class Type {
final String classname;
const Type(this.classname);
String descriptor() => classname;
}
and the classes where I need it have a simple get-method
abstract Type get type();
That way I can use my Type just like I would use the real Type and to switch later I’d just have to delete my workaround.
My question: Is there some dart-way of doing this kind of mapping (which I am not seeing) or is the way I do it a reasonable workaround until the real Type class gets introduced?
Update for Dart 1.0
It can be done this way:
var map = new Map<Type, SomeOtherClass>();
// either
map[SomeOtherClass] = new SomeOtherClass();
// or
var instance = new SomeOtherClass();
map[instance.runtimeType] = instance;
Update: this construction is not currently doable in Dart
you will have to wait for .type/.class to arrive for an elegant solution to this (lots of us Dartisans are hoping that this will arrive sooner rather than later). However for the simpler case
You can just do
as in Dart any class that extends SomeClass is also going to be a valid SomeClass. For example if you run the following code in checked mode:
then you you will get the error: