All objects have a prototype
property. It is simply an object from which other objects can inherit properties. The snippet you have posted simply assigns an object with some properties (such as init
) to the prototype
of jQuery
, and aliases jQuery.prototype
to jQuery.fn
because fn
is shorter and quicker to type. If you forget about jQuery temporarily, consider this simple example:
function Person(name) {
this.name = name;
}
Person.prototype.sayHello = function () {
alert(this.name + " says hello");
};
var james = new Person("James");
james.sayHello(); // Alerts "James says hello"
In this example, Person
is a constructor function. It can be instantiated by calling it with the new
operator. Inside the constructor, the this
keyword refers to the instance, so every instance has its own name
property.
The prototype
of Person
is shared between all instances. So all instances of Person
have a sayHello
method that they inherit from Person.prototype
. By defining the sayHello
method as a property of Person.prototype
we are saving memory. We could just as easily give every instance of Person
its own copy of the method (by assigning it to this.sayHello
inside the constructor), but that's not as efficient.
In jQuery, when you call the $
method, you're really creating an instance of jQuery.prototype.init
(remember that jQuery.fn === jQuery.prototype
):
return new jQuery.fn.init(selector, context, rootjQuery);
And if you look at jQuery.fn.init
:
jQuery.fn.init.prototype = jQuery.fn;
So really, you're creating an instance of jQuery
which has access to all the methods declared on jQuery.prototype
. As discussed previously, this is much more efficient than declaring those methods on each instance of jQuery
.
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