Symbol constructor
- String name
Constructs a new Symbol representing the provided name.
Symbols created from equal name
strings are themselves equal.
If the symbols are created using const
, symbols with the
same name
strings are canonicalized and identical.
Some name
strings create symbols which can also be created using
a symbol literal, or be implicitly created while running Dart programs,
for example through Object.noSuchMethod.
If name
is a single Dart identifier
that does not start with an underscore,
or it is a qualified identifier (multiple identifiers separated by .
s),
or it is the name of a user definable operator different from unary-
(one of "+
", "-
", "*
", "/
", "%
", "~/
", "&
", "|
",
"^
", "~
", "<<
", ">>
", ">>>
", "<
", "<=
", ">
", ">=
",
"==
", "[]
", or "[]=
"),
then the result of Symbol(name)
is equal to the symbol literal
created by prefixing #
to the contents of name
,
and const Symbol(name)
is identical to that symbol literal.
That is #foo == Symbol("foo")
and
identical(#foo, const Symbol("foo"))
.
If name
is a single identifier that does not start with an underscore
followed by a =
, then the symbol is a setter name, and can be equal
to the Invocation.memberName in an Object.noSuchMethod invocation.
Private symbol literals, like #_foo
, cannot be created using the
symbol constructor.
A symbol like const Symbol("_foo")
is not equal to any symbol literal,
or to any source name symbol introduced by noSuchMethod
.
assert(Symbol("foo") == Symbol("foo"));
assert(Symbol("foo") == #foo);
assert(identical(const Symbol("foo"), const Symbol("foo")));
assert(identical(const Symbol("foo"), #foo));
assert(Symbol("[]=") == #[]=]);
assert(identical(const Symbol("[]="), #[]=));
assert(Symbol("foo.bar") == #foo.bar);
assert(identical(const Symbol("foo.bar"), #foo.bar));
The created instance overrides Object.==.
Implementation
const factory Symbol