TL;DR
function MyConstructor() {}
var obj = new MyConstructor()
Object.getPrototypeOf(obj) === obj.prototype // false
Object.getPrototypeOf(obj) === MyConstructor.prototype // true
MyConstructor.prototype // MyConstructor {}
obj.prototype // undefined
MyConstructor.prototype.constructor === MyConstructor // true
Object.getPrototypeOf(MyConstructor) === Function.prototype // true
The confusing part about prototypes in javascript is that there are 2 different things that sound very similar.
When you create a new object, if the function or object used to create the new object has a .prototype method, then the object referenced by .prototype
will become the new object's prototype newObj.__proto__
.
Sounds complicated... let's break it down further.
A. The .prototype property
Example - Using a function as a constructor
When you use the new
keyword on a function (i.e. you use the function as a constructor) then the function's .prototype becomes the new obj.__proto__
.
Lets first make a function and checkout this .prototype property
function MyConstructor(){
}
console.log(MyConstructor.prototype) // {}
Wait up... MyConstructor.prototype // {}
- did something magically happen? Where did this empty object {}
come from?
2 things here:
Javascript automatically creates a .prototype object whenever you declare a function - automagically.
This object is not empty. It actually has a property that points back to the function that created the object (the object's 'constructor'). Let's check it out:
console.log(MyConstructor.prototype.constructor); // [Function: MyConstructor]
MyConstructor.prototype.constructor === MyConstructor // true
So for functions, the .prototype property and it's associated object are created automatically.
Still confused? Lets add some methods in there to make it easier to see what's going on...
function MyConstructor(){
}
MyConstructor.prototype.func2 = function(){
};
console.log(MyConstructor); // [Function: MyConstructor]
console.log(MyConstructor.prototype); // MyConstructor { func2: [Function] }
MyConstructor.func2(); // TypeError: MyConstructor.func2 is not a function
Clearly we can see from the above code that MyConstructor and MyConstructor.prototype are 2 separate entities.
B. An object's prototype
An object's prototype (not .prototype - see A. above) is what javascript uses to lookup and resolve methods that aren't already in the object (more on this later).
Continuing on from above, when we create an object from a function or object that has a .prototype property, the newly created object will have it's object.__proto__
referencing this .prototype object.
An object's prototype can be accessed by
Object.getPrototypeOf(obj)
or the deprecated
obj.__proto__
Example - Using a function as a constructor
Lets make a new object using the function MyConstructor as a constructor.
function MyConstructor(){
}
var obj = new MyConstructor()
console.log(Object.getPrototypeOf(obj)); // {}
Here are the three relevant things:
- MyConstructor (a function)
- obj (an object that was created from MyConstructor)
obj.__proto__
--> MyConstructor.prototype
So obj.__proto__
is MyConstructor.prototype
. Here is the proof:
MyConstructor.prototype === Object.getPrototypeOf(obj) // true
Lets add a method to MyConstructor
function MyConstructor(){
this.func1 = function(){
console.log("this is func1");
};
}
var obj = new MyConstructor();
obj.func1(); // this is func1
From the above you can see that you can call methods that were declared in the constructor. In fact, if we have a look, our declared method func1 is actually part of obj due to the way javascript creates objects.
console.log(obj); // MyConstructor { func1: [Function] }
We can also add methods that obj can use by adding the methods to the prototype. e.g.
MyConstructor.prototype.func2 = function(){
console.log("this is func2");
};
obj.func2(); // this is func2
MyConstructor and MyConstructor.prototype methods will be available to all objects created using MyConstructor using this setup.
Useful References
Definitive Guide to Object-Oriented JavaScript
Understanding JavaScript: Inheritance and the prototype chain
A Plain English Guide to JavaScript Prototypes