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A metatable can be defined like

local t = setmetatable({}, {
  __tostring = function() return 'custom tostring behavior!' end
})

Here are the metamethods that you can define, and their behavior

Operators

In an argument signature like f(a, b), a and b don't necessarily have to be instances of your metatable. One of them will always be, but not necessarily the first. Beware!

Calculation operators

  • __add(a, b): the addition (+) operation. If any operand for an addition is not a number, Lua will try to call a metamethod. It starts by checking the first operand (even if it is a number); if that operand does not define a metamethod for __add, then Lua will check the second operand. If Lua can find a metamethod, it calls the metamethod with the two operands as arguments, and the result of the call (adjusted to one value) is the result of the operation. Otherwise, if no metamethod is found, Lua raises an error.
  • __sub(a, b): the subtraction (-) operation. Behavior similar to the addition operation.
  • __mul(a, b): the multiplication (*) operation. Behavior similar to the addition operation.
  • __div(a, b): the division (/) operation. Behavior similar to the addition operation.
  • __unm(a): the negation (unary -) operation. Behavior similar to the addition operation.
  • __mod(a, b) (Lua 5.1): the modulo (%) operation. Behavior similar to the addition operation.
  • __pow(a, b) (Lua 5.1): the exponentiation (^) operation. Behavior similar to the addition operation.
  • __idiv(a, b) (Lua 5.3): the floor division (//) operation. Behavior similar to the addition operation.

Bitwise operators (Lua 5.3)

  • __band(a, b): the bitwise AND (&) operation. Behavior similar to the addition operation, except that Lua will try a metamethod if any operand is neither an integer nor a float coercible to an integer (see §3.4.3).
  • __bor(a, b): the bitwise OR (|) operation. Behavior similar to the bitwise AND operation.
  • __bxor(a, b): the bitwise exclusive OR (binary ~) operation. Behavior similar to the bitwise AND operation.
  • __bnot(a): the bitwise NOT (unary ~) operation. Behavior similar to the bitwise AND operation.
  • __shl(a, b): the bitwise left shift (<<) operation. Behavior similar to the bitwise AND operation.
  • __shr(a): the bitwise right shift (>>) operation. Behavior similar to the bitwise AND operation.

Equation operators

  • __eq(a, b): the equal (==) operation. Behavior similar to the addition operation, except that Lua will try a metamethod only when the values being compared are either both tables or both full userdata and they are not primitively equal. The result of the call is always converted to a boolean.
  • __lt(a, b): the less than (<) operation. Behavior similar to the addition operation, except that Lua will try a metamethod only when the values being compared are neither both numbers nor both strings. Moreover, the result of the call is always converted to a boolean.
  • __le(a, b): the less equal (<=) operation. Behavior similar to the less than operation.

Misc operators

  • __concat(a, b): the concatenation (..) operation. Behavior similar to the addition operation, except that Lua will try a metamethod if any operand is neither a string nor a number (which is always coercible to a string).
  • __len(a) (Lua 5.1): the length (#) operation. If the object is not a string, Lua will try its metamethod. If there is a metamethod, Lua calls it with the object as argument, and the result of the call (always adjusted to one value) is the result of the operation. If there is no metamethod but the object is a table, then Lua uses the table length operation (see §3.4.7). Otherwise, Lua raises an error.

Behavioral methods

Indexing

  • __index: The indexing access operation table[key]. This event happens when table is not a table or when key is not present in table. The metavalue is looked up in the metatable of table. The metavalue for this event can be either a function, a table, or any value with an __index metavalue. If it is a function, it is called with table and key as arguments, and the result of the call (adjusted to one value) is the result of the operation. Otherwise, the final result is the result of indexing this metavalue with key. This indexing is regular, not raw, and therefore can trigger another __index metavalue. Examples:
    local tab1 = {foo = 'bar'}
    local tab2 = setmetatable({}, {__index = tab1})
    
    print(tab2.foo) --> 'bar'
    local tab = setmetatable({count = 0}, {
      __index = function(self, _k)
        self.count = self.count + 1
        return self.count
      end
    })
    
    print(tab.index) --> 1
    print(tab.indexagain) --> 2
    print(tab.asdfasdf) --> 3
    print(tab[1234]) --> 4
  • __newindex: The indexing assignment table[key] = value. Like the index event, this event happens when table is not a table or when key is not present in table. The metavalue is looked up in the metatable of table. Like with indexing, the metavalue for this event can be either a function, a table, or any value with an __newindex metavalue. If it is a function, it is called with table, key, and value as arguments. Otherwise, Lua repeats the indexing assignment over this metavalue with the same key and value. This assignment is regular, not raw, and therefore can trigger another __newindex metavalue. Whenever a __newindex metavalue is invoked, Lua does not perform the primitive assignment. If needed, the metamethod itself can call rawset to do the assignment. Examples:
    t = setmetatable({}, {
      __newindex = function(t, key, value)
        if type(value) == 'number' then
          rawset(t, key, value * value)
        else
          rawset(t, key, value)
        end
      end
    })
    
    t.foo = 'foo'
    t.bar = 4
    t.la = 10
    print(t.foo) --> 'foo'
    print(t.bar) --> 16
    print(t.la) --> 100

Calling

  • __call(args): The call operation func(args). This event happens when Lua tries to call a non-function value (that is, func is not a function). The metamethod is looked up in func. If present, the metamethod is called with func as its first argument, followed by the arguments of the original call (args). All results of the call are the results of the operation. This is the only metamethod that allows multiple results.

Garbage collection & memory management

  • __mode: Controls how "weak" a table is. If present, must be one of the following strings: "k", for a table with weak keys; "v", for a table with weak values; or "kv", for a table with both weak keys and values. A table with weak keys and strong values is also called an ephemeron table. In an ephemeron table, a value is considered reachable only if its key is reachable. In particular, if the only reference to a key comes through its value, the pair is removed. (see §2.5.4)
  • __close(value, err?) (Lua 5.4): Called when a variable is closed (see §3.3.8).
  • __gc(): Called when the the garbage collector detects that the corresponding table or userdata is dead. See §2.5.3

Misc

  • __tostring(): If the metatable of v has a __tostring field, then tostring calls the corresponding value with v as the argument, and uses the result of the call as its result. Otherwise, if the metatable of v has a __name field with a string value, tostring may use that string in its final result.
  • __metatable: Changes the behavior of getmetatable. If object does not have a metatable, returns nil. Otherwise, if the object's metatable has a __metatable field, returns the associated value. Otherwise, returns the metatable of the given object.
  • __name: Used very rarely internally (see luaL_newmetatable) and by tostring() if the __tostring metamethod is missing.
  • __pairs() (Lua 5.2): Affects iteration when using the pairs() function, letting you define a custom iterator function (see pairs(), next()).
  • __ipairs() (Lua 5.2): Same as __pairs(), except for the ipairs() function.

Implementation-specific

  • __iterator() (MoonSharp): Called if the argument f of a for ... in ... loop is not actually a function.
  • __usedindex() (SRB2): Called when assigning an index/value to an existing key/variable.

References

https://www.lua.org/manual/5.4/manual.html#2.4

https://ebens.me/post/lua-metatables-tutorial/

https://www.lua.org/versions.html

https://www.lua.org/manual/5.4/contents.html#index

https://www.moonsharp.org/additions.html

https://wiki.srb2.org/wiki/Lua#Changes_from_standard_Lua

@abhishekmishra
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This is so helpful! Thank you.

@che8u
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che8u commented Feb 17, 2024

Thanks for this :)

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