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Simple scenario for using .prototype

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-02-05 19:30 出处:网络
2 Questions: Below, will Code A and Code B have the same result? ADDITION after reading answer of @Box9: What about Code A vs. Code C?

2 Questions:

  1. Below, will Code A and Code B have the same result?

ADDITION after reading answer of @Box9: What about Code A vs. Code C?

  1. What is a simple, practical, intu开发者_StackOverflow社区itive coding scenario where Code A is the preferred technique?

Code A: with .prototype

function employee(name,jobtitle,born)
{
    this.name=name;
    this.jobtitle=jobtitle;
    this.born=born;
}

employee.prototype.salary=null;

Code B: without .prototype

function employee(name,jobtitle,born)
{
    this.name=name;
    this.jobtitle=jobtitle;
    this.born=born;

    employee.salary=null;
}

Code C: with .prototype , nothing inside

    function employee(){}

employee.prototype.name=null;    
employee.prototype.jobtitle=null;
employee.prototype.born=null;
employee.prototype.salary=null;

Apologies ahead of time, I realize there have been other SO questions on .prototype and many web tutorials, however those explanations seem to be either overly simplistic or just technically over my head.


In your example, Code A is correct, while Code B is not.

To explain, we can think about employee from three different aspects:

  1. A "standard" employee - the default set of values common to all new employees. It's the mould from which we create new employees. E.g. salaries for new employees start off as null.
    • This is the prototype.
  2. A "particular" employee - say, John. He initially starts off with a null salary (from the "standard" employee), but he can get assigned his own salary later on. He also has his own name, job title, and birthdate which are unique to him.
    • The unique properties are assigned using the keyword this within the employee() function.
  3. Employees as a group - blanket values that aren't stored for each employee, but for all employees at once, e.g. all the employees are from Company A.
    • This is setting a property directly on the function employee.

Now relating back to your two code examples,

employee.prototype.salary = null in Code A is correct because it is setting the starting salary for the "standard" employee.

employee.salary = null in Code B is incorrect because it is setting the salary for all employees as a group - i.e. it's not just a default value, but a single, blanket value for all employees. It doesn't matter that this code is inside the employee() function - the only difference the function makes is that it allows you to use the this keyword to refer to the "particular" employee that is currently being constructed as a result of calling new employee().


Firstly, Code A and B will have different results. Code A has a constructor for an object and adds a property to its prototype. This means all instances of employee will have a field called salary, which is null. As is the normal behaviour for prototype properties, if any of those instances write to the property, it will create a local copy for the object.

So, using Code A:

var e = new employee('Bob', 'janitor', 1978);
alert(e.salary);  // null

var f = new employee('Alice', 'teacher', 1976);
f.salary = 20000;

alert(f.salary);  // 20000
alert(e.salary);  // null

In the case of Code B, none of the instances of employee will have salary as a property, but the constructor will, e.g. employee.salary will exist, and be more like a static class variable in classical inheritance. You might do that if you wanted to have a value available for all instances, e.g. employee.RETIREMENT_AGE = 65, but you would usually do that after the constructor, not in it (you're assigning the same thing repeatedly).

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