Metaobject

In computer science, a metaobject is an object that manipulates, creates, describes, or implements objects (including itself). The object that the metaobject pertains to is called the base object. Some information that a metaobject might define includes the base object's type, interface, class, methods, attributes, parse tree, etc. Metaobjects are examples of the computer science concept of reflection, where a system has access (usually at run time) to its own internal structure. Reflection enables a system to essentially rewrite itself on the fly, to alter its own implementation as it executes.[1]

  1. ^ Smith, Brian C (1982-01-01). "Procedural Reflection In Programming Languages". MIT Technical Report (MIT-LCS-TR-272). Archived from the original on 13 December 2015. Retrieved 16 December 2013.

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