87 lines
2.3 KiB
Markdown
87 lines
2.3 KiB
Markdown
The answer has two parts.
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The first, an easy one is that the inheriting class needs to call `super()` in the constructor. Otherwise `"this"` won't be "defined".
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So here's the fix:
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```js run
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class Rabbit extends Object {
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constructor(name) {
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*!*
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super(); // need to call the parent constructor when inheriting
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*/!*
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this.name = name;
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}
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}
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let rabbit = new Rabbit("Rab");
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alert( rabbit.hasOwnProperty('name') ); // true
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```
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But that's not all yet.
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Even after the fix, there's still important difference in `"class Rabbit extends Object"` versus `class Rabbit`.
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As we know, the "extends" syntax sets up two prototypes:
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1. Between `"prototype"` of the constructor functions (for methods).
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2. Between the constructor functions itself (for static methods).
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In our case, for `class Rabbit extends Object` it means:
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```js run
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class Rabbit extends Object {}
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alert( Rabbit.prototype.__proto__ === Object.prototype ); // (1) true
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alert( Rabbit.__proto__ === Object ); // (2) true
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```
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So we can access static methods of `Object` via `Rabbit`, like this:
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```js run
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class Rabbit extends Object {}
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*!*
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// normally we call Object.getOwnPropertyNames
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alert ( Rabbit.getOwnPropertyNames({a: 1, b: 2})); // a,b
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*/!*
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```
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And if we don't use `extends`, then `class Rabbit` does not get the second reference.
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Please compare with it:
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```js run
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class Rabbit {}
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alert( Rabbit.prototype.__proto__ === Object.prototype ); // (1) true
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alert( Rabbit.__proto__ === Object ); // (2) false (!)
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*!*
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// error, no such function in Rabbit
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alert ( Rabbit.getOwnPropertyNames({a: 1, b: 2})); // Error
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*/!*
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```
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For the simple `class Rabbit`, the `Rabbit` function has the same prototype
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```js run
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class Rabbit {}
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// instead of (2) that's correct for Rabbit (just like any function):
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alert( Rabbit.__proto__ === Function.prototype );
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```
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By the way, `Function.prototype` has "generic" function methods, like `call`, `bind` etc. They are ultimately available in both cases, because for the built-in `Object` constructor, `Object.__proto__ === Function.prototype`.
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Here's the picture:
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So, to put it short, there are two differences:
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| class Rabbit | class Rabbit extends Object |
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|--------------|------------------------------|
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| -- | needs to call `super()` in constructor |
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| `Rabbit.__proto__ === Function.prototype` | `Rabbit.__proto__ === Object` |
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