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  1. JDK
  2. JDK-8066046

JEP 292: Implement Selected ECMAScript 6 Features in Nashorn

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    • Hannes Wallnoefer
    • Feature
    • Open
    • JDK
    • nashorn dash dev at openjdk dot java dot net
    • L
    • L
    • 292

    Description

      Summary

      Implement, in Nashorn, a selected set of the many new features introduced in the 6th edition of ECMA-262, also known as ECMAScript 6, or ES6 for short.

      Goals

      Correctly implement a substantial number of ES6 features in Nashorn in JDK 9.

      Because of the size of this undertaking, we need to deliver ES6 in several steps of which JDK 9 will only be the first. Remaining ES6 features will likely be delivered in JDK 9 update releases and future major JDK releases.

      Motivation

      ECMAScript 6 was released in June 2015. No JavaScript engine so far provides complete support for ES6, but the major engines including Google V8, Mozilla Spidermonkey, and JavaScriptCore have recently made major inroads in the implementation of ES6.

      We started implementing ES6 in Nashorn with JEP 203 (let and const) in JDK 8u40. In order to keep up with the other engines, we plan to add support for a significant subset of the ECMAScript 6 features in JDK 9.

      Description

      ECMAScript 6 includes the following new features:

      • Arrow functions: a concise way of defining functions using => syntax

      • Classes: a way to define classes using inheritance, constructors, and methods

      • Enhanced object literals: support for special and computed property keys

      • Template strings: dynamically-evaluated multiline strings

      • Destructuring assignment: assignment binding using object or array syntax

      • Default, rest, and spread parameters: more flexible argument passing

      • let, const, and block scope: block-scoped declaration of variables and constants

      • Iterators and for..of loops: a protocol to iterate over arbitrary objects

      • Generators: a special kind of function to create iterators

      • Unicode: full Unicode support with backwards compatiblilty

      • Modules: language-level support for the definition of modules

      • Module loaders: support for dynamic loading, isolation, and compilation hooks

      • Map, Set, WeakMap, and WeakSet: various new collection classes

      • Proxies: allows creation of objects with special behaviour

      • Symbols: a new kind of unique property key

      • Subclassable built-ins: built-ins such as Array and Date can be subclassed

      • Promises: an API for asynchronous future completion

      • Math, Number, String, and Object APIs: various new functions on built-in objects

      • Binary and octal literals: new forms for numeric literals

      • Reflection API: API for performing meta-programming operations

      • Tail calls: allow recursive code without unbounded stack growth

      Of these features we already implemented let, const, and block scope in JDK 8u40 as JEP 203. Several other features have been prototyped and should be added to the list of ES6 features supported in the initial release of JDK 9. These include the following items:

      • Template strings
      • let, const, and block scope
      • Iterators and for..of loops
      • Map, Set, WeakMap, and WeakSet
      • Symbols
      • Binary and octal literals

      Other features have been partially prototyped and their completion seems possible in a limited time frame. These are candidates for inclusion in JDK 9 update releases:

      • Arrow functions
      • Enhanced object literals
      • Destructuring assignment
      • Default, rest, and spread parameters
      • Unicode
      • Subclassable built-ins
      • Promises
      • Proxies
      • Math, Number, String, and Object APIs
      • Reflection API

      The remaining features are more involved and will likely take longer to implement. While it might be feasible to include some of these in JDK 9 update releases, we are currently targeting them for future major JDK releases. These features are:

      • Classes
      • Generators
      • Modules
      • Module loaders
      • Tail calls

      ES6 feature implementation notwithstanding, the Nashorn parser in the JDK 9 Nashorn repository already supports the ES6 syntactic changes.

      Alternatives

      Instead of the iterative approach proposed here we could choose to ignore ECMAScript 6 for the time being, and instead focus on improving our existing ECMAScript 5 based implementation instead.

      Alternatively we could try to implement ES6 in a single effort. However, that would prevent us from getting feedback and finding errors early on. Also, the size and number of new features in ES6 makes that approach impractical

      Not making any effort towards ES6 would be a mistake and deliver the wrong message to users and customers.

      Testing

      As part of the work of implementing parts of ES6 we developed a base body of functional tests that will be part of the JEP.

      Work has also started to run the ES6 version of the official ECMAScript conformance test suite test262. Initial results are encouraging. However, switching from the ES5.1 version of test262 to the ES6 version as our primary test suite is not feasible since many of the tests require a complete ES6 implementation.

      We will rely on the ES6 version of test262 during the development and integration of this JEP to spot bugs and fill in missing parts. The plan is to switch to the ES6 version as our primary ES6 test suite once we approach full ES6 functionality.

      Risks and Assumptions

      The ECMAScript 6 specification has been released and large parts of it have been implemented in various JavaScript engines, so there is no more risk of a moving specification or of ambiguity in the specification text.

      It is possible that our prioritization of features leaves out some feature that developers demand. The proposed iterative approach, however, ensures delivery of all missing features over time.

      Dependences

      There are dependences between various features within ES6, and our order of implementation has been chosen to address the features in order of increasing complexity.

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              jlaskey Jim Laskey
              mtrudeau Michel Trudeau
              Hannes Wallnoefer Hannes Wallnoefer
              Alex Buckley, Brian Goetz, Jim Laskey
              Brian Goetz
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