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Home/ Questions/Q 8798947
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 14, 20262026-06-14T00:12:27+00:00 2026-06-14T00:12:27+00:00

I would like to make a generic function wrapper that (for example) prints the

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I would like to make a generic function wrapper that (for example) prints the called function and its arguments.

Doing so is easy through the arguments quasi-array and simple calls. For example:

function wrap(target, method) {
    return function() {
        console.log(Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments).join(', '));
        return method.apply(target, arguments);
    }
}

However, this way of doing of course completely loses the arity of the called function (if you didn’t know, one can obtain the arity (number of arguments) of a JavaScript function through its length property).

Is there any way to dynamically create a wrapper function that would copy the arguments of the wrapped function to itself?


I’ve thought about creating a new Function object, but I don’t see any way to statically extract the arguments list, since the arguments property is deprecated.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-14T00:12:28+00:00Added an answer on June 14, 2026 at 12:12 am

    Here’s a solution using Function:

    // could also generate arg0, arg1, arg2, ... or use the same name for each arg
    var argNames = 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz';
    var makeArgs = function(n) { return [].slice.call(argNames, 0, n).join(','); };
    
    function wrap(target, method) {
        // We can't have a closure, so we shove all our data in one object
        var data = {
            method: method,
            target: target
        }
    
        // Build our function with the generated arg list, using `this.`
        // to access "closures"
        f = new Function(makeArgs(method.length),
            "console.log(Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments).join(', '));" +
            "return this.method.apply(this.target, arguments);"
        );
        // and bind `this` to refer to `data` within the function
        return f.bind(data);
    }
    

    EDIT:

    Here’s a more abstract solution, which fixes the closure problem:

    function giveArity(f, n) {
        return new Function(makeArgs(n),
            "return this.apply(null, arguments);"
        ).bind(f);
    }
    

    And a better one, that preserves context when invoked:

    function giveArity(f, n) {
        return eval('(function('+makeArgs(n)+') { return f.apply(this, arguments); })')
    }
    

    Used as:

    function wrap(target, method) {
        return giveArity(function() {
            console.log(Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments).join(', '));
            return method.apply(target, arguments);
        }, method.length)
    }
    
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