[ 
https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/FLEX-34913?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
 ]

Josh Tynjala updated FLEX-34913:
--------------------------------
    Description: 
Try the following ActionScript:

class Example
{
    public var prop:Object = {};
}

var obj:Example = new Example();
obj.prop.value = 5;

var obj2:Example = new Example();
trace(obj2.prop.value); //5

The emitter puts the prop member on the prototype, so it is shared by all 
instances of Example:

Example.prototype.prop = {};

Instead, the emitter should set the property in Example's constructor so that 
each instance has a separate object. Maybe something like this:

public function Example()
{
    this.prop = {};
    super();
}

There is a workaround. A developer can manually set the property in the 
constructor, basically using the same code as above:

class Example
{
        public function Example()
        {
                this.prop = {};
        }

        public var prop:Object;
}

  was:
Try the following ActionScript:

class Example
{
    public var prop:Object = {};
}

var obj:Example = new Example();
obj.prop["value"] = 5;

var obj2:Example = new Example();
trace(obj2.prop["value"]); //5

The emitter puts the prop member on the prototype, so it is shared by all 
instances of Example:

Example.prototype.prop = {};

Instead, the emitter should set the property in Example's constructor so that 
each instance has a separate object.

There is a workaround. A developer can manually set the property in the 
constructor:

class Example
{
        public function Example()
        {
                this.prop = {};
        }

        public var prop:Object;
}


> Types passed by reference should not be stored on the prototype because they 
> are shared by all instances
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: FLEX-34913
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/FLEX-34913
>             Project: Apache Flex
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: FalconJX
>    Affects Versions: Apache FalconJX 0.0.3
>            Reporter: Josh Tynjala
>
> Try the following ActionScript:
> class Example
> {
>     public var prop:Object = {};
> }
> var obj:Example = new Example();
> obj.prop.value = 5;
> var obj2:Example = new Example();
> trace(obj2.prop.value); //5
> The emitter puts the prop member on the prototype, so it is shared by all 
> instances of Example:
> Example.prototype.prop = {};
> Instead, the emitter should set the property in Example's constructor so that 
> each instance has a separate object. Maybe something like this:
> public function Example()
> {
>     this.prop = {};
>     super();
> }
> There is a workaround. A developer can manually set the property in the 
> constructor, basically using the same code as above:
> class Example
> {
>       public function Example()
>       {
>               this.prop = {};
>       }
>       public var prop:Object;
> }



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