In short
Yes, your observation is correct - a function constructed with the new
operator will always have an object prototype in this case Object.prototype
and this is indeed unlike a function created with Object.create.
On why
One can see this behavior completely specified in the ES5 language specification on which JavaScript is based on. Let's see this.
In new
:
Quoting the specification of the [[Construct]]
method of functions that indicates how object creation using the new
operator is performed we can see that the following is specified:
If Type(proto) is not Object, set the [[Prototype]] internal property of obj to the standard built-in Object prototype object as described in 15.2.4.
In Object.create
:
On the other hand, if we check out The spec for Object.create
we can see that Object.create(o)
specifies:
Set the [[Prototype]] internal property of obj to O.
Which means we can set it, it also explicitly checks that it is null or Object in that algorithm (please do follow the link to the spec and read it :))
So the prototype of the objects called with new Foo
is Object.prototype
and not null
. It is impossible to create objects with no prototype without Object.create
using standard methods only.
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