Expanding upon my last post on Property based Dependency Injection, let's have a look at what we need to do in order to inject into methods - here's what we want to achieve:

class Person { private _firstName : string ; private _lastName : string ; @inject ( 'firstName' , 'lastName' ) setName ( first : string , last : string ) { this . _firstName = first ; this . _last = last ; } getFullName () : string { return ` ${ firstName } ${ lastName } ` } }

Here we are decorating the Person#setName() method with the @inject decorator and requesting the values mapped against the 'firstName' and 'lastName' injection keys from the Dependency Container - our test case would look something like this:

// Setup the container injector . map ( 'firstName' , 'Jonny' ); injector . map ( 'lastName' , 'Reeves' ); // Instantiate a Person, the container will apply the injections. const jonny = injector . instantiate ( Person ); // Test it worked. if ( jonny . getFullName () !== 'Jonny Reeves' ) { throw new Error ( 'expected jonny.getFullName() to be Jonny Reeves but was ' + jonny . getFullName ()); }

First of all we need to modify our @inject decorator, originally it only expected a single argument (the injectionKey ), as methods can take more than one argument we need to make use of rest parameters to accept any number of strings:

function inject (... injectionKeys : Array < string > ) { ... }

We face a slightly tricker challenge in the fact that injecting values into methods requires us to inoke a method rather than just assinging a property on the target object, in the previous implementation the __inject__ Object was a simple hash of property name to injectionKey, but in order to inovoke the target method with the injection values in the correct scope we will need access to the target object as well. To group this data together I've created an InjectionPoint object and assign this as the new value in the __inject__ map:

function inject (... injectionKeys : Array < string > ) { return function recordInjection ( target : Object , decoratedPropertyName : string ) : void { /* ... */ targetType . __inject__ [ decoratedPropertyName ] = new InjectionPoint ( target , decoratedPropertyName , injectionKeys ); } }

Now we're storing the InjectionPoint data we need to modify Injector#instantiate() to make use of it when invoked. The first change is driven by the fact the target Class' __inject__ property is a hash of propertyNames to InjectionPoint 's and that an InjectionPoint provides one or more injectionKeys (before it was a hash of propertyNames to a single injectionKey), Injector#getInjectionValues() makes light work of this returning a collection of values to be injected:

class Injector { /* ... */ private getInjectionValues ( injectionPoint : InjectionPoint ) : Array < any > { return injectionPoint . injectionKeys . map ( key => this . valuesByInjectionKey [ key ]); } }

Now we need to determine how these values should be injected (either via a property of the target object, or by invoking a method of the target object). Seeing as the InjectionPoint has all the knowledge it needs to perform the correct injection I employed the Hollywood Principle and added an InjectionPoint#inject() method which the Injector invokes:

class InjectionPoint { /* ... */ inject ( values : Array < any > ) : void { if ( typeof this . _target [ this . _decoratedPropertyName ] === 'function' ) { this . _target [ this . _decoratedPropertyName ]. apply ( this . _target , values ); } else { // Property injection can only use the first value. this . _target [ this . _decoratedPropertyName ] = values [ 0 ]; } } }

As before, the code and unit tests can be found over at github.com/jonnyreeves/ts-prop-injection - I've also raised a pull request on the repo to highlight the changes: github.com/jonnyreeves/ts-prop-injection/pull/1.